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Florida 



Wednesciay 

November 1, 1978 




Serving TattahsMM for 66 yman 



Gordon: BOR charging 
state illicitly for research 



by dennis mulqueen 

flambeau staff writer 

Senate Ways and Means Chairperson 
Jack Gordon yesterday lashed out at the 
Board of Regents again, this time alleging 
the Board is charging state agencies 
illegally for research already funded by the 
legislature. 

The Board requires state agenaes lo 
pay 10 percent of the total cost of research 
under the Service Through Application of 
Research (STAR) program. The legislature 
allocates $1 million -each year for research 
requested by the more than 26 state 
agencies it serves. 

it is unauthorized, and they have no 
legal basts for requiring the agencies to 
pay part of the cost," Gordon said. 

Gordon, in charge of the Senate purse 
ktrings, said Aat just see that it 
ioesn't happen any more. lt*s not up to 



them to decide who to tax." 

John Daley, head of the STAR program, 
said requiring the agencies to bear part of 
the cost burden "gives a more concrete 
indication of the agencies' sincerity in 
wanting the research done." 

**It requires them (the agencies) to take 
a closer look at their priorities," Daley 
said. The funding requirement is 
necessary, Daley said, to augment the 
current research budget. 

FSU currently receives around $300 
million in extra research money under the 
STAR program. 

BOR Chancellor E.T. York told United 
Press International he believed state 
agencies should help pay for the research. 

Requiring the agencies to bear part of 
the cost burden forces them "to document 

turn to GORDON, page 1 1 





Sen. Jack Gordon 



Student senate 
primaiy election 
today at FSU 

liy caryn carlson 

flambeau writer 

FSU Elections C v>mmissu)ner Vancv 
Balcv yesterday attributed the numerous 
incidents of campaign poster removal lo 
"peiiy rivalry" among candidates. 

Even though one honiecv)ming candidate 
actually caught two sororits sisters of 
another candidate in the act of tearing down 
a campaign poster, penalties imposed will 
be small. 

Poster removal is presently classified by 
the FSU Election Cixie as a minor offense, 
which is punishable by a $1 fmc for the tlrst 
infraction and S2 fines for each additional 
infraction. 

Students go to the polls today to cast 
ballots in the primary elections of student 
government senators. Union Board 
members. Alumni Council officers, and a 
Homecoming Chief and Princess. 

Ballot boxes will be open from 8:30 a.m. 
to 7 p.m. and are located at Mcxire 
Auditorium, Bellamy Building, the Fine 
Arts Building, the Law School, Wiihams 
Building, Education Building, the Post 
Office Arcade, the Music Arcade, Keen 
Plaza and Strozier Library. 

Voting for senators is limited to those 
students registered in the college which the 
senator is representing, and senior 
students only may vote for Alumni Council. 

Union Board and Homecoming Chief and 
Princess elections are open to all students. 

A validated FSU student identification 
card must be presented by students wishing 
to vote. 

Election results, which will be tallied by 
computer in the Business School following 
counting at the Office of Evaluatiof 
Services, should be available by midnigh 
tonight. 



Football: More to scoring 
than penetrating endzonesi 



by jiin cox 



Those fanny slaps and ho^ of joy 
expressed by burly footbaU players during 
moments of excitement may be overt 
displays of homosexual behavior, according 
to a Univar«ty of CaUfoniia aatltfopcrfogy 
l^fessor. 

Analyzing the game in terms of ** sexual 
imagery," Alan Dundes at the Berkeley 
branch of UC has recently completed a 
paper, his study of football for "the 
p^cbological rationale*' which led to "the 
unpr^edented acceptence of the sport." 
Dimdes maintains that this unprecedented 
acceptaiK» is largely due to the "pattern of 
sexual imagery used in a game played only 

by nudes." 

"In its essence," Dundes maintains, 
**American football is an adolescent 
masculinity initiation ritual, in which the 
winner gets into the loser's endzone more 
times than the loser gets into his!" 

Dundes' study appears in a book to be 
published this January, edited by FSU 
anthropology professor Bruce Grindal. 

GruKlal describes Dundes' writing as 
"tongue in cheek," although Grindal 
hesitates to discount the validity of Duades' 
study. 

"Football used to be nothing," Giindal 



says, "Now it's almost a passion that i: 
reflective of our aggressive society. Then 
must be something to help explain this — 
there are other sports that provide the 
competition and violence of football . . . but 
none are so popular." 

Dundes began to look for a deeper 
explanation to football's popularity after 
reading an article in Natural History 
magazine titled "F(X)tball: The Great 
American Ritual." In that article much of 
the data Dundes used in his study was put 
forth, "but the article's author failed to see 
the connection between the sexual imagery 
and the fact that football is exclusively a 
male sport," Dundes explains. 

**Men can't express themselves 
physically lo one another without being 
deemed homosexuals." Dundes said 
yesterday in a telephone interview, "so we 
set up some ritualized form of expression 
which creates an outlet for this behavior." 

A few of the ritualized expressions 
Dundes mentions in his report arc the slang 
terms used in the game, the equipment 
employed for protection, and some of the 
physical stances and motions used in game 
situations. 

"The whole language of football is 
turn to FOOTBALL^ pago 2 



2 / Wednesday, November 1, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 




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FSU planning campus child care service 



by susan waller 

flambeau writer 

FSU plans to establish a daycare center within a year, 
student body president Neal Friedman announced 
yesterday, although the source of its funding is still 
undetermined. 

The proposed center will provide low cost care for the 
children of FSU students, staff, and faculty members. 

**The number one priority is now to establish a location 
for the facility," Friedman said yesterday. An existing 
building is desired so as to eliminate construction costs, he 
added. Without a location, there is no chance of getting any 



Football 

from page 1 



involved in sexual allusion/' Dnndes noted. 'Teams are 
told to go net and 'fuck those guys;' to take the ball and 
'stick hup their asses' or *do«m their tinoats.' The coadies . 
. . yell ioiock thek dicks off,' or more often, 'knock their 
jocks off.' " 

Even foothatt Slang connotes homosexuality, Ihindes 

Even football slang connotes 
homosexuality, Dundes said. 
He pointed out that it's common 
to 'make a pass' in order 
to 'score', that teams 'open 
up holes/ and that offenses try 
to 'penetrate' each other's 
territory 



state grant money for the profect. 
A current Board of Regents rule does not allow Flofida 



universities to accept state money for 







•lllllt 





re programs. 



Dr. Bob Leach, FSU vice-president for stodent affiurs. who 
approved the daycare plans, hopes to intiodtice a change in 
this bUl to allow die state to fund nmverslty daycare centers 

in a BOB meeting Nov. 6 in GainesviBt, Fkieteas said. 

If the BOB doesn't change its poUcy accepting state 
money , then the funding win Come from federal grants and a 
limited amount of student government funds, Friedman 

says. 

It is unclear whether state employes would be allowed to 



FSU daycare center if state funding is provided, but 

according to Friedman, "FSU students, staff and facalty 
members will receive top priority.*' 

Leach win soon appoint a pianahig committee for the 
program, consiatii^ ol iepmtiMatives tan the Woneo's 
Center, stodent govemiMnrt aiidSlBdeat AHmts. 

FSU has not had a daycare program for seven years. The 
former program was phased out and the building ton dowa 
when the university ran into fiscal problems. Stute 
government and the Women's Center have pushed recoMiy 
to remstate a day care program. 



said. He pointed out that it's common to **niake a pass" m 
order to "score," that teams "open up holes," and that 
offenses try to penetrate each otiier's territory. 

The equipment, Dundes claimed, also "accents the male 
physique through the enlarged head and shoulders coupled 
with a narrowed waist . . . with the lower torso poured into 
skintight pants accented only by a metal codpiece." 

AdditionaUy, Dundes cited the three-pmnt stance 
characteristic of footbaU linemen as a "stooped position 
with one's rear exposed . . . making one especially 



vulnerable to attack from behmd, that is. vutoerable to a 
homosexual attack." Dundes then compares the stance to 
"presenting," or a suborinate animal's turning its rump 
towards a higher raiddng or dominant one. 

Dundes used as a bans for his paper his 4>wn perscmal 
observatioas as weU as scholariy works on foodMdl by 
anthropologist, psychoK^sts, and sociologists. 

The study singles out the motion qf "spiking," where a 
player scoring a touchdown hurls a bafl forcefoUy to die 
ground, as one area of almost climactic expression. 

"The ritual act of spiking serves to prolongate imd 
accentuate the afl too brief moment d successful entry into 
the enemy's endzone." 

"The team scored upon is thus shamed and humiUated in 
front of an audience," he added. 

Dundes does not just single out the offensive aspect of 
play for sexual imagery either. 

"The defense getting to the offensive quarterback is 
termed 'sacking' the quarterback," he said. "The verb^ 
'sack' connotes plunder, ravage, and perhaps even rape." 

Dundes pointed also to spectator slang such as the term 
"football widow" as another area of sexual imagery. The 
term is used, he explained, to describe a man who is so 
drawn to the sport that he totally forget about his "sexual 
partner" on Monday nights and Sunday afternoons during 
the fall. 

Grindal emphasizes the spectator's role as one of the 
more important reflections on present day society. 

"Americans are so obsessed with work," he says. "We 
live a very stressful livestyle and we must then, I feel, have 
an equally stressful form of entertainment to blow-off all of 
the week's intensity and stress." 

"The football game is one ritual that breaks down the 
barriers which separate people normally, it's something 
most everycme can find enjoyment in," Grindal adds. 

For spectator and participant alike, it seems, these weekly 
bouts on the gridiron are somewhat more significant than 




Dr. Bruce Grindal 



photo, by Jonathan bumetta 



can be described in simple terms of won^lost records, or 
post-season bowl bids. The entire event, anthropologists 
and sociologists say, is representative of a ritualistic 
expression of pn^ibited behavior which we choose to show 
only through "thinly disguised symbolic form." 

Still, as <Mie student said yesterday when shown Dundes* 
story: "So that's why I go; hell I thought it was just to drink 
and yeU." 




F/NALL Y/I 



Apalachee Parkway 

iMTS a K-Marf) 



Hot Dogs Hamburgers 

Fish and Chicken 
Salad Bar 

''More to Eat - More of a Treat'' 

other locations Atlanta, Ga , Columbus, Ga , DoW»««»' A'*- 



Gen 
enf< 



by 



A Florida li 
cicts to nbstj 
dnigs for brai 

Stricter em 
revisten. a tl 

appointed to 
eoBchided yest 

The State 
regulates an 

pharmacists, 
to consumers 

mitlion annual! 

The commiii 
outgoing H< 
Tucker to ti 
complaints thi 
inferior in , 
than expccti 

The Phan 
can't impUii. 
fhcv tlon't ha' 
say tht \ 
sail! Rvp 1». 
five commit t' 
Rep. S a i 
majoritv 1< adi 
committee, ai 
that the Pharr i 

•The F>hai 
failed to pr 
the existing \ 

Revokini; th^ 
compliance lU 
solve the p' 

Projecl Ni. 
stutlyintJ the 
that 0^• 
consunu ! 

"Fly b\ f 
maris t ' 
sa v 1 
emplu. 
we re nor su 
to look at qualH 
A study doi 
Co.. a leadiiiL 
Rose point' 
drugs have s< 
and Drug Adnn 
times more 
actions a>4ainst 



C 
D 



r> oDiHA n AMBEAU Wednesday,,, November 1 1978 ' 3 



Generic drugs law needs stricter 
enforcement, committee concludes 



by dermis mulquMii 

fUmbcau &taff wrtter 

A Florida law requiring pharma- 
cists to substitute cheaper generic 
drugs for brand name drugs needs 
stricter enforcement rather than 
revision, a legislative committee 
appointed to study the problem 
concluded yesterday. 

The state Pharmacy Board, which 
regulates and licenses the state's 
pharmacists, estimated the saving 
to consumers is between S7 and $10 
million annually. 

The committee was SippoisAed by 
outgoing House Speaker Don 
Tucker to investigate consumer 
complaints that generic drugs are 
inferior in quality and high^ priee4 
than expected. 

"The Pharmacy Board said they 
can't implement any. laws because 
they don't have any authority. We 
say they do have the authority," 
said Rep. Dale Patchett, one of the 
fne committee members. 

Rep. Sam Bell, the House 
majority leader and also on the 
committee, agreed with Patchett 
that the Pharmacy Board is at fault. 

"The Pharmacy Board has totally 
failed to provide rules to enforce 
the existing statutes," Bell said. 

Revoking their licenses for non- 
compliance. Bell said, would help 
solve the problem. 

Project Masters, a research firm 
studying the problem, has charged 
that the law is not saving 
consumers money. 

"Fly by night generic houses are 
marketing low quality drugs that 
save pennies," Stu Rose, an 
employee of the firm, charged. "If 
we're not saving money, we ought 
to look at quality." 

A study done by Eli Lilly and 
Co., a leading pharmaceutical firm. 
Rose pointed out, said generic 
drugs have seVen times more Food 
and Drug Administration recalls; 43 
times more FDA-initiated court 
actions against them; and cme-and- 




i 



LIBRIOM 




The tranquilizer Librium, second 
only to Valium in frequency of 
prescription, costs about 30 
percent more than its generic 
counterpart. One local pharmacy 

a-half times more FDA Drug 
Product Problem reports. 

"There is a direct relationship 
between the size of a company and 
the amount of research done," 
Rose said. Generic drugs don't 
have to be quality tested under 
FDA laws if their main ingredient 
has already been tested, he added. 

Proponents of the 1976 Florida 
law, which requires physicians to 
write "medically necessary" on the 
prescription form if a specific brand 
name drug is desired, originally 
claimed the law would save 
consumers $40 million per year. 

According to Rose, no evidence 
shows consumers are coming out 
ahead. 

Peggy Borden, a pharmacist at a 
local Eckerd Drugs^ disagreed. 

"I think it's a good consumer 
savings — you can get ripped off 
anywhere, not just in a drug 
store." she said. The pharmacist 
said many generic drugs are just as 
effective as brand name drugs. 



CHARLES 

DANGLER 






sells a dozen fO-milligram pills 
from Roche Laboratories {left) for 
$2. 10, while the generic equivalent 
\right)isonly$im 




for 

Student Senate 



CONCER 



ABOUT THE FLORIDA S1ATE STUDENT 



BASIC SIUNES. SEAT #10 
NOVEMBER 1. 1978 

Paid Political Advertisement 
funded by tite Charles Oangter Mr FSU SamI* Campaign 



RICCO'S 

4 

1 

Rear Wing of the -j 
Quality Inn Southern Airei 

224-7116 i 



CHECK THE ACTIO.* 

RECORD 

Two years ago FSU students elected ACTION to a 

majority in the Senate — look what we accomplished: 

I \ 

* 24-hour visitation for dorm residents 

* increased hours at the Health Center 

« lighted the intramural fields 

* kept the rec-council independent of SG 

4$ increased the intercollegiate athletk: budget 

Last year ACTION did not win a majority in the Senate 
but did that stop us? NO WAY!! Look: 

* ACTION senators author&d bills which 
provided more progtamming money to the 
inter-residence hall council, the 6.S.U., the 
Greek Coufidl, the Maichirtg Chiefs, the 

intramural departrnerit, LP0« and othen . . . 

The other party claims to support the entire student 
body — Where's their record? 

Wake up Seminoles! ACTION speaks buder than wordsJ 

VOTE TODAY AND KEEP 

ACTION I 

WORKING FOR YOUII 



I 



(II 



I: 

1 tiaa 



1 

Ik 




Bo 



As Rohm I 

vou arc to 

conimiltcti 

one ot thr 
still above 
contest 

The poinl 
thcmstl^ ts. 
makes su. 
that this un| 
couple u hu 
role all "pi 
pMsive am 
ourselves. 

Ah. you 
parading ai 
universitv' 
\\f all i \p( 
soU i. It ll t« 

and jM Tstui. 

traits ,»t( .u| 
like so nuirn 
detergents 
promised el 

Further. 
Homecomir 
electit)ns w 
budget. Whl 

Finally. l| 
themselves 
Implicit her( 

End 

I would HI 
who is ninni 
has claimed 
Consumer ! 
Union's Bon 
candidate. 

The Cot 
we do not 
Therefore. II 
Greenberg li 



Flaml 



This is ju 
me for the lai 
politician wl 
to wield po^ 
district is 
dietionary o< 
improve. 



25' 

till 1 1 t( 

to: 



J 4 



M 




FLAMBEAU Wednesday. Nov ■ ' 



e 



i.e., that 
sks used 
lestruct- 
Ids to the 

11) The 
id only 
(mediate 
fong trek 
)rida is 
2) No 
of the 
handle 
The law 
ficensing 
lling of 
rucking 
ccording 
'hoever 
I toes for 
the job, 

gall to 
nuclear 
lent of 
low that 
isoline, 
I years? 
m. co- 
!33 and 
medical 
l-sity of 
Iv. has 
fully 
onomy 
n would 
;nt of all 
/ould be 
cancer 
|y sound 
en? If it 
Isciously 
Ithen he 
|we treat 
ipt. 
le to the 
letter. 
;ive the 
labels 
lade an 
alls us 
^pagan- 
"band- 
latuitous 
all that 
|es with 



Boycott of Homecoming is in order 



As Robin Morgan has said. **No matter how em|>athette 
you arc to anodier's oppression, you only become truly 
committed to radical change when you realize your own 
oppression — it has to reach you on a gut level.*' 

This last week has brought home to us at Florida State 
one of the more glaring examples of sex role stereotyping 
still above ground — the H o mec omi iig Chief and Princess 
contest. 

The point of this letter is not to ridicule the contestants 
themselves, but rather to questimi the consck>usness that 
makes such blatant degradation possible. The very idea 
that this university wtti be represented to the public by a 
couple who will for all intents and purposes epitcmiize the 
role all oppressed people play (apolitical, unoffending, 
passive and delktte) is insult to what we think of 
ourselves. ^ 

Ah, you say, what's so harmful about some people 
parading around in **cutesy*' outfits doing PR for the 
university? Let's look at the tradition of homecoming as 
we all experienced it. Beginning in high school, those 
selected to fill these positions were elected on appearance 
and personality. But on the collegiate level all personality 
attributes seem to have been dropped and only physical 
traits are accented. People are being sold and packaged 
like so many brands of dish washing soap. At least with 
detergents you get a list of active ingredients (with their 
promised effects) in addition to pretty packaging. 

Further, it appears that packaging of these 
Homecoming candidates absorbs more energy than the SG 
elections which determine the use of a $2 million plus 
budget. Where are our priorities? 

Finally. I note the labeling of the representatives 
themselves: "Homecoming Chief" and "Princess." 
Implicit here is the assumption that while the Princess is at 

Endorsement denied 

Editor: 

I would like to clear up a matter concerning a candidate 
who is running for Basic Studies Seat 11. Mike Greenberg 
has claimed that he is endorsed by Florida State's Student 
Consumer Union. I have a position on the Consumer 
Union's Board (tf Directors and have never heard of this 
candidate. 

The Consumer Union is an apolitical organization and 
we do not support any candidates in the elections. 
Therefore, I would like to deny any endorsement of Mike 
Greenberg in this election. 



Flambeau illiteracy irritates 

Editor: 

This is just a note to your staff. They have been irritating 
me for the last month with their illiteracy. The phrase for a 
politician who uses government contracts/ appropriations 
to wield power and influence particularly in his home 
district is pork barrel, not pork chop. If you used a 
dictionary occasionally, the quality of your paper might 
improve. 

Oaire Marty 



2S< DRAFT 

till 11 tonight at 



TOHUTS 



1 1 



RMICO'S 

f Kf. A SIT 





least a mt mb( r (if the royal family, the Chief, a male, 
directs the shou , Double whammy! First to be reduced to a 
pair of Barbie doUs, then to be portrayed as the lesser of 

the dummies. 

If the purposes of the Chief and Princess are to do PR for 
the university, then let's come up with a non-sexist 
evaluation of the desirable qualities for these 
representatives and act on them. But if the purpose of 
Chief and Princess is to manipulate people into 
derrogatory and powerless roles, as I believe it is, then we 
must boycott Homecoming elections altogether. 

ptm^ (IjMidie) Jones 





VOTE 




TERRI LOEFFLER 

for 

Homecoming Princess 

Pd. Pol. Ad. 



Ladie s Jeans 
New Styles from >^V'Ay ^ 
20 New Styles of Tops 



denims 
khakis 



576-2196 



fashion pockets 
pleats 
poplins 

brushed denim 

Open 7 days 




1 1 



0^ 



I - 1 



#•3 1 



» 1 



Mules laden with Bhi€ Maguey pituu am their wa^ to CWm't La RifetULpiant 



Since 1795 weVe gathered our 



Blue Maeueys for Cuervo Gold 
the gentle waji 

It8 the old way. And still 
the best. 

At Cuervo we know that there is only one way to make 
Cri£rvo Gold perfect The way we've been doing U for more 
than 180 years. 

That's why people still nu rture our fields of Blue 
Maguey jjlants. And why mules are still used to bring 
these predmLS plants to our distillery, fbr tradition is stiU 
the most important ingredient in Cuervo Gold, 

This is what makes Cuervo Gold truly special. Neat, 
on the rocks, urith a splash of soda, in a perfect Sunrise or 
Margarita, Cuervo G<M uriU bring you back to a time when 
quality ruled the world. 

Cuervo. The Gold standard since 1795. 

CUERVO ESPCaAL^TCCMJIA 80 PROOT IMPORTED AND BOTTlEO BY 0 1978 HEUBLEIN. INC.. HARTFORD. CONN. 



r 




^ 




• / 



1, 1978 FLORNM 



FAMU HomeaJjning in full swing 




d u a ' e . 



aroiind the 
for a week of H 

A A M BoBdogs 




evening. The ooronatioD. 
FAMl reiaticMK, istlK 
of 



ADen, director of 



Hili speak at the university 
conw»ca:K)n ir^ Lee Hall AudiTonum 00 Friday at II a.m. 

A new addition to this vear s Rattler Homecoming is 
Tesoraooia] Day. A banquet will be held Friday at 5 p.m* 
ID sakte Ih. George W. Gore. Jr., kmmet pesidem Mad 
fif iirti nf ementus of FAMU. 
llie irmft^r*^ MaO^kea' Strfte wiD be held in Bragg 
StMdmm St 8 pjm. oa Friday, following the 
Dr. GeotfeGoR and Pre«i d e«t Waher L. Smith 
It dhaiys Id tfae s tn d fti, with deefs, yells, 
fire«'of4s fisniAm lait IIk evcaiag. 

win step off at 9:J0 a.m. 
of Brevard wmi Macomb, 
« MacoMb to Call, tm east ob to 



is 1:30|MB. SatmdMf mt 



FSU primary narrows 

Michael Greenberg independent candidate for FSU 
student senate basic studies seat 1 1 said yesterday he is 
withdrawing his namt from today's baQot. 

Greenberg mistakenly believed he had been endorsed 
by the FSU Student Consumer Union, he said, and he 
nad Slated that as fact on his campaign posters. Upon 
being informed he did not have the endorsement, he 
decided to leave the race "because it might have given 
me an unfair advantage. 

His withdrawal reduces the number of independent 
candidates to 18. 



Vote delayed 

The Leon County Commission voted yesterday to 
postpone unti] No\ . 14 a decision on the licensing of rotrf 
contractors and air conditioner repair workers. 

Presently these workers are not licensed by the county, 
but need a state license. The license, backers argued, 
would help eliminate complaints from residential and 
commercial dwellers about poorly coostn^rted roofs and 
faulty air conditioning repairs. 

Opponents said, however, that present state licensing 
is sufficient and county lirensing woaid only dutfaer 
government bureaucracv 



In Brief 



KEViOUS fiaUBA INSURED STUDENT LOAN 
HDcqMents who are mom rligihir for the Federal Insured 
Stadeot Loan Renewal Prt^raoi dirougfa the Southeast 
Rrst Natkmal Bank of Miami imtst a|iply before Nov. 22 to 
retail? their eUgibility stams. Fonns must be submitted to 
the FSU finaactal aid office no later than Friday, fiov. 10, 
to a&MT for pfnoe^b^. Stadoits wbo faave not appBsd 
before but plan to altoiid mmmtt qaarlxr awst tkso waeet 
tbc Nov. 22 deadline. 

^'SOUIH AMERiCAM mOSK AMD Tm WORLD 



VIEW" is the topic of a lecture, demonstration and a slide 
presentation by Dr. Dave Olsen of the FSU department of 
music today at 3:30 in Room 128 Diffenbaugh. This event 
is open to the public and sponsored by the FSU Latin 
American CoUoquium. 



Weather 



PartJy 
with lows 

be 

It. 



skies are predicted 
60 aad ii^is in die Bpper TQs 
M^east at 10 to IS m.piu* 



w9I 
at 



Nukes 



the mdustry it is regulating. Gearly Mr. Warren sides 
with the big folks who are determined to make their 
various investments in nuclear power pay off. even 
though this makes the icreveisible poisontiig of oar 
planet a real possibility. 

Mr. Warren "s responsibility as a state ^ployee. is to 
protect the citizens of Florida from the substantial health 
hazards of radiatiom. If this responsibility is not 
performed w nh total objectivity we have no guarantee <rf 
protection. Obviously Mr. Warren is in no way an 



objective party to this controversy. He is committed to 
nuclear power, he has faithfully digested and now 
repeats the biased viewpoint erf the nuclear industry aiHl, 
sad tosay, lie bitys his groccties wiHi tai^ayers* money. 



Editor's note: Catfish Affiance inaiAers 
Barry Sniddn wiD debate Hk 
WFSU-FM's 
Wamn tirighl at 10. fan 



nuclear power an 



show. 



• • • that wild and crazy guy 

from Ft WALTON BCH., 
would appffociato your vote... 



ALAN WINSLETi £ 

(WRITE-IN CANDIDATE) 

FOR 1978 
HOMECOMING CHIEF 





I 
f 
I 

♦ 
♦ 
♦ 
I 

t 



F.S.U. Students: 
You are getting screwed ! 



There has been growing dissatisfaction 
anr^ong the students over some of the 
University's policies and services (e.g. studen* 
parking, the health center, and financial a c 
These things can only be changed through 
the actions of a Mong student gowamment 
that has the smu'Wift and aivolManMnl of the 
body. It is liaw tfiat tha s tudent 

tfvc tMOrtcs for inalBod of a stage for 




Weal 

— the Student 

Party. 

Vote for Jeff Armstrong 

for Student Senate, 
Arts and Sciences Seat 6 




FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Wednesday, ^klvember 1, 1978 




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Troops occupy Iran refinery 



TEHRAN. Iran (VFD — The govemmcsA yestefday 
advised its troops against possible satwtage in the 
aootheni iraoian oil fields where a series of wildcat 
strikes had shut down production of the $20 bSHon a 
year oH Mntiy, the official Pan news agency 
reported. 

Pars said martial law authorities took charge of parts 
of the world's faugest integrated oil refineiy at Abadan 
with the help of a mmdwr of staff who are not on 
strike, the official agency teported. It did not give 
details. 

The milkary move came annd mounting viotenoe in 
ban. Forty-one people were repotted kffled in fighting 
MoBdiqr, hKMBng 15 fitiffitles hi a Wild West-style 
horseback raid by 2,000 armed trHiesmen on opponents 
of the shah in the western iraaian town of Pavcy. 

Renewed fighting between demonstrators and 
government troops alab hnike €kA yesterday in the 
Kurdish town of Sanandiy in weslem Iran, killing 11 
people and injnrii^ 64 others, official reports said. 

The state-run news agency said the troops acted 
^ter the government received reports that "saboteurs 



have threatened to damage oil installations in 
Khuzestan and to disrupt the oil industry . " 

"Military Ibices are on the alert near the 
installations to prevent any accidents/' Pars said. 
**The supply and distribution of oil are normal,'* the 
agency said, but did not elaborate. There was no 
indication if the statement meant tiie strike that had 
shut the fields smce Monday had collapsed. 

The National kaaian Ofl Con^Muiy's chairperson, 
Hottdumg Ansaiy, met w^ striting workers and 
sU^ of the re&iety. apparentiy without any decision to 
end the strike, which Prime hfimster Jaalar ^larif 
Emami condemned as an "act of treason." 

As the strike cut away at ban's 922 billion annual oU 
revmes at « nUe of $60 millioB a day, Hs intact on 
the consumers in the West and Ji^ian was not 
immediately known. 

The government appeared to be considering 
fuO-scaie mffitaty intervention to run the multi-phased 
operations from the oil wells down to tiie loading of 
international mpertankers at tiie Kharg Island jetties 
in the Persian Gulf. 



. . . while U.S. reaffirms shah 



WASHINGTON (UPD — President Carter and the 
State Department issued warm words of support and 
sympathy for tiie embattled diah of Iran yesterday and 
expressed confidence his government will survive 
ban's violent political upheavals. 

Pentagon officials said there were no current plans 
to evacuate any of tiie estimated 41,000 Americans who 
live and wmk in fran, and energy officials predicted 
the sudden shutdown of Irtn's gigantic oil industry 
would do no **imme<Mate" harm to U.S. energy 
supplies. 

Defense spokespersons meantime said Tehran — 
whose armed forces are equipped with advanced U.S. 
weaponry of all kinds — has not asked for any extra 
military aid to deal with its mushrooming domestic 
crisis. 

Some officials said it was clear there would be no 
direct U.S. intervention on the shah's behalf this time 
as there was in the crisis of 1953, and one remarked 
that, in any case, "lade of military equipment is not his 
problem.** 

Anticipating widespread alarm over the econonuc 



and political impact of the anti-shah riots^ strikes and 
street batties, U.^. officials led by Carter stressed their 
confidence in the monarch whose nation furnishes 
about 10 percent of America's daily oil imports and 
provides a bulwark against Soviet expansion in the 
near East. 

**We wish the shah our best and hope the present 
disturbances can soon be resolved," Carter told the 
shah's son. Crown Prince Reza, a U.S. Air Force 
trainee who paid an 18th birthday visit to the White 
House. 

** We're thankful for his move toward democriK^/' 
the president said. "We know it's opposed by some 
who resist democratic principles. But his progressive 
administration is very valuable, I think, to the entire 
Western world. 

"Give your father and your mother my best." 

Iranian students staged a brief anti-Shah 
demonstration outside the White House during the 
prince's visit. Police broke it up and reported taking 
several dozen into custody for demonstrating without a 
permk. 



Meany condemns Carter anti-inflation plan 



WASHINGTON (UPI) — AFL- 
CIO President George Meany 
condemned President Carter's 
voluntary anti-inflation drive yester- 
day as a recession threat and called 
for mandatory wage price controls 
to head off mass unemployment in 
America. 

In his first public comments on 
the administration's inflation fight- 
ing package, Meany urged Carter 
to call a post-election session of 
Congress to enact mandatory 
controls. 

If Carter refuses to do so, Meany 
said, organired labor will push for 



such legislation when the new 
session of Congress convenes in 
January. 

But Meany stopped short of 
declaring all-out war against the 
Carter program in the meantime, 
only saying the labor federation 
would not pressure its members to 
follow the wage standards. 

Meany's statement was endorsed 
unanimously by the federation's 
35-member Executive Council. 

Labor Secretary Ray Marshall 
predicted the administration would 
make a success of the anti-inflation 
program in spite of the AFL-CIO*s 



stand. 

He said the administration has 
received "many offers of support 
and cooperation from both business 
and labor since the president 
announced his anti-infiation pro- 
gram." 



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Yes. d««eN» te the werd. Perhaps If yam •to.t speMi the 
five mimites it takes to vote today, your ckUdren woa^ lie 
able to v«»te at all t«Haorrow. Our American history booiui 
luive told as repeatedly that voting is the very 
eornerstone of our American freedom. So why then are 
so nuiny young people not voting? We should realisEe that 
by abandoning mar political voice, we are apathetically 
clawing at the very foundation of our frecnlom. 

The foundation of freedom > it's damned important ! 
Perhaps too important to appreciate untU it's gone, 
until it's too late. IJntU they take away our right to vote. 
Not to decide, is to decide. 
Net to vote is really a dangerous decision... 

QM'S FOUND ATS »]^ 




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IT^S DAMRIED IMPC RTAKT! 

Student Government elections 

are today. VOTE! 



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FSU aichaeolog^ imearfli secrels 
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TOii A5ILED FOfi fT. 

M ^l^^J^ - - - A — - A J» m 




<IYNN 

<=HAMR1CK3 

for 



I 



Gordon 

,r ,m in a %€r\ ^ 
t ruM n the universit 
research dollars to 
po^bk:. Vork said 

••Who dix^s hr ( 
(M>rd«>n said \ ester 
interview He *s not 
lor of the v^hoU- v <ni 
weren't interested, 
the research.*' 

Gordon said he 
auditor general to i 
and determine if 
should be reimburse 

"This kind of arn 
mooey shows wh\ 
tgttmst revision H u 
the kind of pov^er ii» 
Miami senator sani 

Bevision 8. wha 
Hov. 7 baiku alo 
proposed revisit 
constitution, mak' 
Regents an appom 
the Board of 
constitution. 

Gordon s remark 
complaints from D 
Resources Director 
other ofTicials that t 
provide SI. 000 per 
10 peroeirt of eac 
July 1. 

Shiekis' departmej 
beaeficlors of the S 

The Department 



United 
short o 



Five of FSU's 14| 
the finish line, and 
in this week's exten| 
Campaign, but the 
needs $10.()()0 to rej 

Represented in tl 
Friday . are the 10 
and colleges ot Hn 
and S<Kial Work 
each reached niort 
goals; F'.dueation ai 
percent marks. 

All totalled. 46 o| 
in all corners of the 
about percent oi 
pledge their fair 
campaign is to 
officials. 

All proceeds of 
^nd projects ot 
1^hild^en. provide n 
food to the needy 
handicapped, and 
social aid. advice 
students. 



They've 
Let a 

VO 



R.OraOA FLAMBEAU Wed n wdiy. NoMmtar 1, 1978 / 11 




Gordon from page 1 



,itir interest and enthusiasm in this 
irogram in a vcrv concrete wav. and will 
nablc the university system to stretch its 
research dollars to the maximi^m extent 
H)ssiHlc-.'" Vork said. 

•Who does he (York) think he is?" 
Gordon said yesterday in a telephone 
interview. **He's not Mettemich, chancel- 
lor of the whole country, if the agencies 
weren't interested, they wouldn't ask for 
(he research.'* 

Gordon said he intends to ask the state 
auditor general to investigate the matter 
and determine if some state ageadet 
should be reimbursed. 

"This kind of arrogance with taxpayers 
money shows why people should vote 
against revision 8 which would give them 
the kind of power to be this defiaDt/' the 
Miami senator said. 

Revision whkl| jwiU apfiear 4mi the 
Nov. 7 ballot along with seven other 
proposed revisions to the Florida 
constitution, makes the state Board of 
Regents an appointed bodjr mA writes 
the Board of Regents into the 
constitution. 

Gordon's remarks were prompted by 
complaints from Departnfei^ of Natural 
Resources Director Hamion Shields and 
other officials that they were required to 
provide $1,000 per project last year and 
10 percent of eadi project's edit rfler 
July 1. 

Shields' department is one of the major 
benefactors of the STAR program. 
The Department of Natnn^ Resoorces 




E.T. York "'^^as^^ndmo 



received $30,000 last year for tlie study of 
an estuary off Alligator Foint. This yen*. 
DNR got $25,000 to study the rdatioBsliip 
between beaches and the Florida 
economy and another $2S,000 to stndy 
the impact of crowding on Florida* state 
parkis. 

GMon has recently criticized the 
Board for devoting too much time and 
money to research at iSbe expense of 
instruction. Gordon singled out the 
Regents* Professor Program, which 
allocates extra dollars to procure 
distinguished out-of-stale faculty. 

In the past, Gordon has chastised iStte 
Board for not increasing the graduate 
school facilities of universities located in 
the state's central population areas, 
which are in the southern haH of the 
state. 



United Way campaign 
short of FSU goal 

Five of FSU's 14 schools and colleges have crossed 
the finish line, and two more are heading for the tapes 
in this week's extension of the Leon County United Way 
Campaign; but the steering committee says FSU still 
needs $10,000 to reach its campuswide $42,000 goal. 

Represented in the $32,901 reported pledged as of last 
Friday, are the 100-percent-plus efforts of the schools 
and colleges of Business, Law, Library Science, Music 
and Social Work. Home Economics and Nursing have 
each reached more than 90 percent of their individual 
locals; Education and Arts and Sciences are at the 70 
percent marks. 

Ail totalled. 46 of the 117 sub-units and departments 
in all corners of the campus had exceeded their goals — 
about 39 percent of the number of groups who need to 
pledge their "fair shares" this week, if the overall 
campaign is to succeed, said steering committee 
officials. 

All proceeds of the drive go to support the services 
and projects of 15 local organizations which help 
children, provide childcare centers, offer counseling and 
food to the needy, the elderiy and mentally or physically 
handicapped, and provide a wide variety of legal and 
social aid. advice or assistance to area residents and 
students. 



AU I lON 

They've proven their leadership! 
Let them represent us again! 

VOTE ACTION TODAY 

Pd. Pol. Ad. 



VOTE 

Phillip 
Quayle 

for FSU Homecoming Chief 




I may be as ugiy asan open 
woufMi, burl pfainiMnik:**v 



Snrule constanUy 



Be bubbly 



Freeze property taxes 
Veto any rwMr spencing bSs 

Get the U.S. out of Iran 

WR/TB4N 
QUAYLE TO THE CHIEF 



★ 



Mad as Hell would like to thank 
the crowd last mght We loved 
playing for you and hope you had 
a great firm. 



* 



r 



QU£SHON: Why are the past president 
of Interfratemity Council, the president 
of the Black Student Union, the current 
and past presidents of Interresidmice 
Hall Council (dorms), the president of 
the Southern Scholarship Foundation 
(scholarship houses), the director of the 
Woman's Center, the president of the 
Young Democrats, and the director of 
CPE all endorsing or running with the 

UNITED SEMIN0LES? 



ANSWl 



Because the 
UNITED SEMINOLES 

represents aU of us. 

VOTE 

UNITED SEMINOLES 

TODAY! 




r I , 



V 



I 



! f 



fe 



lift: 



f Ml 



i: 



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ma 



♦I 



1? ' Wffl'^'-^^rlav November '978 ctlORIDA plAMEEAU 



The ghost of Joe McCarthy 



California's anti-gay 
campaign raises the spectre 
of blacklists, 
red-baiting and fear 



by mary ellen leary 

pacific news sar^ici 

The *'fear factor" has become so significant in the 
campaign around Proposition 6, the initiative to ban 
homosexual teachers from California's public schools, that 
**No 011^6" forces have decided to.pu|>licly confroi|t tl}e. 
secret anxiety that is haunting this political effort. 

They have taken out a full-pagp advertisement, in 
Variety and the Hollywood. Reporter afserting: "If you like 
the blacklist, you'U love Propositi 6.** 

Opponents hope the ad will expose the fear of future^ 
retribution that has prevented many film stars, musicians, 
advertising people and weidthy **name" figures fronr- 
identifying themselves as opposed to the initiative. 

"We're going to deal with this thing head-on," said 
Michael Levett, Southern California chairperson q& the 
"No on 6" drive. "Seiiool teachers aren't the only ones 
who have felt they must keep their views on the 
homosexual issue in %m dariL.*' 

The initiative, sponsored by John V. Briggs of Orange 
County, would requite dismissal of school teachers and 
adaiinistrators "for advocating, soliciting, imposing, 
encoura^uig or promoting private or public sexual acts. . . 
between persons of Ifie same sex in a manner lU^^y to 
come to the attenticMt of other employees or students; or 
publicly or indiscreetly engaging in such acts.*' 

According lo Levett, **the whole Soutfaem Califcmiia 
conmiinity artists, whether straight or gay, is 
apprehensive lest ^ bladdist be revived. VkuKf are 
courageous and come out anyway. But there is a fear here 
that careers vflll be at stake ot a boycott be encouraged 
against those who take sides in this issue.'* 

This fear is revealed in the contributions. ' Fully 
one-fourth of the nMney raised from a recent mail appeal 
arrived in checks just under $50. "That's the breaking'- 
point for anonymity," Levett said. "You'd think we had a 
markdown sale going, we get so many $49.99 
con^butions. yihaX we are hearing constantly is the fear 
that the lists, which ate pubfie dticments, wffl be used 
in the future to harraii suppo rt ers." 




The Southern California campaign headquarters lists its 
voHinteers only by their first names. And the Northern 
California headquarters, according to spokesperson 
Andrea Jepson. agreed to keep secret the names of 
camerapersons, artists, ad experts and film advisers who 
prepared its television spots for the anti-Briggs drive. . 

According to David Mixner, a top campaign organizer 
for George McGovem, Eugene McCarthy, Tom Bradley 
and others. "The degree of fear that has been stirred up 
by this campaign is unique to this issue. I have never 
encountered anything like this in any previous political 
experience." 

His Los Angeles political consulting firm has k>$t several 
clients since it began working on the campaign s^ainst the 
initiative. 

"In this wholesale attack on homosexuality, the right 
wing has found an issue similar to the old commie issue of 
years back," he said. "It is insidious in exactly the same 
wa3^ It is an instrument for smearing someone and once a 
person has been involved, no degree of response can erase 
the harm done. 

turn to GHOST, page 13 



ACTION 

Wbrking for more 
Money lor entertainment and 

Qmlity Concerts 
Vote to4|r - Vote ACTION 

Pol. Ad. 



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CANOE TRIP 

1st 14 to sign up get 
to go. 

For more information, 
call 644-6710 or come 
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"l CMN COCrCfL PRESIDt ^ 



A Paid Political Advertrsemtnt 
by ttie Refiiissance Party 





••••••••• 



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lAtllCE JENNINGS 
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We propose to unite the Student Advisory 
. Conmittees of each department to 
strengthen the student voice in the 
decisions of the faculty, and to create 
SAC'S In those departnients where they 
do not exist 



We propose the organization of dorm 
residents into a power bloc so that they 
might have a greater input into decisions 
affecting thek living conditions. 



We propose to offer aid and support to 
those groups eg., international students, 
who are especially vulneraiite to 
administrative ecKcis. 

Pd. Ptri. Ad. 



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Ghost 



••1 



'Yea woold 

ncccssar\ Sud 
Man> pcopU 
to give public su 

they arc g^"* 
Heteroaeiuals 

homosexuals, h 

But %ome ce 
viacLaine. Paul 
icnt tht'tr name 
Stated their a I at 
Filin director 
raising and pu 
their home «>n 
said. "I had 

Aften^ ard h 
People I've alv^ 
no!* When I pir 
thing, that this 
careers." 

But the publi 
Jaglin said. It 
We've gotten a 
money in $51 
ahead, list n\\ 
As a result. 1 
have an iniprc 
October tund r 
about this tea 
recreating of 
whisperings an 
over the reasun 
startled people 
Jepson. the 
campaign agai 
recent surge o 
many large do 
•*We set our 
informative ca 
got a bit less th 
people who no 
participating 

One reason \ 
a **No on f> ■ 
well-to-do ga\ 
and they are 

The respect 
shows Proposi 
Levett. howev 
almost SO SO 

Although n« 
head of the H 
said he has 
expressing tbr 
fear, he said 
tremendous ni 
— sticking ' 
people." 

In that res 
Propositk>n ^ 
former Califor 
pobik climate 
iavaskw of pri 
said. 

(Edit0r*B no 
pyHtlca, la a c 
She la tiie ai 
Califoniia go% 
Tlw Economic 

•••• • • • • • 



of M 
aTcnnes 

OPEN 24 

223 t 



•••••••• • 





sday, Novembef 1. 19g» / 13 



Ghost 



•You wottM hardly know we wege io a 
campaign, whcie the right to ipeak freely is abiohttely 
necessary. Suddenly people are afi«id to speak out/' 

Many people in the entertmnment'^industry ate reluctant 
to give pubKc support because their sponsors might decide 
they arc getting "too controversial/' Mizner said. 
Heterosezuals are just as wary of hivolvement as 
homosexuals, he added. 

But some celebrities in tiie fihn world, induding Shirley 
MacUine, Pkul Newman and Natalie Wood, not only have 
lent their names to the antl-Brlggs effort, hot also have 
stated then* alarm at the fear pervading the techistry. 

Film director Henry Jagfin and his wife staged a fund- 
raising and publicity reception against Proposition 6 at 
their home on Sept. 9. Aboot 100 attended, but, Jaglin 
said. "I had to fight for every one of them." 

Afterward he told The Lot Angeles Times, 'i was naive. 
Peoirie Tve always been able to count on said, 'Absolutely 
no!' When I pinned them down they each said the same 
thing, that this is something that can affect them in their 
careers.** 

But the publication of his statement was a turning point, 
Jaglin said. '*It woke people up. In fact, it shook them up. 
We've gotten a flood of mail, willing endorsements and 
money in $51 or $55 sums ever since, people saying, 'Go 
ahead, list my name. 1*11 risk it.*** 

As a result, Levett said, '*It looks now as though we will 
have an impressive list of Hollywood talent (at a mid- 
October fiind-raiser) because we came ovt in the open 
about this fear thing. Artists today don't want any 
recreating of the McCarthy era fear of clandestine 
whisperings and blacklisting with never any confrontation 
over the reason. Alarm lest we're on the brink of that has 
startled people.** , 

Jepson, the spokesperson for the Northern Califomia 
campaign against Proposition 6, said that despite that 
recent surge of support, the campaign has not attracted 
many large donors. 

**We set our aim for $1 million to conduct a strong and 
informative campaign," Jepson said, "but so far we've 
got a bit less than $200,000. . .It perplexes us that so many 
people who normally give sizeable donations are just not 
participating.** 

One reason was suggested by Jim Foster, chairperson of 
a "No on 6" fund-raiser for Northern California. Many 
well-to-do gays, he said, fear that the measure will pass 
and they are saving their contributions for a court battle. 

The respected California Poll, taken by Marvin Field, 
shows Proposition 6 leading by 61 percent to 31 percent. 
Levett. however, said oiher polls show sentiment divided 
almost 50/50. 

Although not involved in the campaign, Don Slater, 
head of the Hollywood Homosexual Information Center, 
said he has found people "astonishingly honest** in 
expressing their opposition to the measure. The reports of 
fear, he said, present "a bad image." **We see a 
tremendous number of people — more than we expected 
- sticking their necks out, many very well-known 
people.** 

In that respect, Levett said that a statement against 
Proposition 6 by Ronald Reagan, former film star and 
former California governor, had made a difference in the 
public climate. "I think he is sensitive to the tremendous 
invasion of privacy this measure would represent," Levett 
said. 

(Editor's note: Mary EUen Leary, who covers Califomia 
politics, is a contributing editor of Pacific News Service. 
She is the author of **Phantom Politics** on the 1974 
Califomia govemor's race; her work also has appeared hi 
The Economist, The Nation and The AttonUc. 




DOWNTOWN GULF : 

SniDENT SPECIAL ; 
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Philippe Junot, 
Married to Royalty: 
**I got my position as 
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ELECT 





tnoQss 

Paid Potitical Advrtiiwnenf 




Walk into the incredible true 
experience of Billy Hayes. 

And bring all the courage 



you can 




An km PARKER Film MIDNIGHT EXPRESS E«*«p™d»» PETER GUBffls«.w.r*OUVER STONE 
»,ALAN MARSHALL ana DAVID PUnNAMi>«c«»,ALAN PARKER •.^o—., GIORGIO MORODER 

Based on me tfu€Sloryol Billy Hayes from He took MklrogW Expuss tnm\y mViwAWkXm \m^m^mammmmt 

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Storls^May/ n/13. Vanity 11 



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THEATRES 



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14 / Wednesday, November 1. 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAXJ 



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The Dregs talk on Ue problem of originality 



liy st9v» dollar 

flamtMif st»## writtr 

Tboii^ tli« Dixie Dregs record for Macoo's Caprioom 
Records, have AMman Brothers* associate Tw^s iysdoB as 
manlier, and sometiines even me Doaae's old Les Paul 
guitar to record with, the group's imiik has very little to do 
with soothem hoogie. 

And, unlike many rodt and roU bands, the Dregs all have 
professional trai^^, as they fomied a fe«r yms out of 
the University of Miami music schod. 

Drawing on an eclectic variety of itrflnences, including 
jazz, country, hloegrass, rock, and classical the Dregs daim 
to fit no distinct musical label — other tiian origimd. Yet, 
while this has established them apart from olher so-called 
Southern bands, it has also made it harder for the group to 
find their way onto the airwaves. 

**Our infhiences are so scattered, it would be hard to 
begin to list them," said bass player Andy West. About 
the only obvious comparison that people make is to the 
Mahavishfiu Orcl^stra. But I think we've pretty much, 
developed our own style.** 

Working mostly along a Southeastern circuit that includes 
cities like Charlotte, H.C. and Augusta, Ga., the Dregs have 
built a scM following of fans that range from * 'crazies with 
no intellect at all to people who listen to no other rock 
band,'* West saM. 

While the group has recorded two critically well-received 
albums on Capricorn records, *Tree Fall** and "What If,** 
and developed a steady audience, they remain frustrated at 
getting their music on the radio. 

•*The radio people just aren't willing to take risks — we're 
as marketable as the Bee Gees but it*s hard to breidc in," 
complained West. 

The band's latest single, an instrumental called **Tsike It 
Off the Top,** received some airplay, even readiing mnibet 
one at an Augusta Ga. station and alcmg with the '*What If* 
album, is getting attention from many college markets. 
However, both the smgle and die album failed to make the 
crossover to the big, commercial FM markets. 

As lead guitarist and main songwriter Steve Morse 
explained, the fauh for this lies not with Capricorn's 
promotion, but with the recording business itself. 

**0^rkxim has been doin* us right; they've been di»n' 
the very best they can. It's just these radio people,** he said. 

Apparently, big-mark^ disc ^ickeys and industry moguls 
just nen*t Hstenii^. ' 

'They catagoricaUy won't play instrumental music; they 
categorically don't ^^n to southern bands. Befiore they 
even tidce the plastic off the package, theyH say *well here's 
a Capricorn band, Dixie-stMi^tiiin^or other, no way, I know 
what that shit is," Morse said, mocking a behind-the-desk 
vocal tcme. 

However, if the band can overcome the obstacles before 




The Dixie Dregs . . . from left to right [top] Mark Parmh, Men Sloan, [tottomlAndy 

Rod Morgenstein, Steve Morse. 



West, 



mm 



them, establishing an identity that transcends labels that 
pin them as a southern-boogie or progressive jazz group, 
Morse feels they may receive greater commercial success. 

"Right now it's strictly twisting arms. FM radio is a 
problem, but AM is just about impossible," Morse 
explained. 

"Hello, I'm from Caprices Records and you have got to 
play this record. 1*11 take you out to dinner four times this 
week, here's the cocaine, all the goods you want," Morse 
said, mimicking an imaginary salespitch. 

"I've been good to you haven't I, now please play the 
Dixie Dregs." "NO,** came back a loud respome. 

"Thai's how it is," Morse said. 

Despite the frustrations, the Dregs remain optimistic of 
their success, and play not for the money €»" fame, but for 
the music. 

"We'd have to be doing a whole lot worse for me to 
change what I'm doing," said violinist Allen Sloan. "We've 
seen enough feedback from the public that lets us know 
that we're doing something right and that makes us feel 
good." 



The band was recently featured in Downbeat magazine, 
and Morse and West will be written up in a forthcoming 
issue of Guitar Player, which insures further feedback. 

More exhilarating fc» the group, however, was a summer 
appearance at the Montreux Jazz Festival. 

"Being in Switzerland was totally unreal," Sloan said, 
referring to the event as the band's high pmnt thus far. 

Some erf the Dregs' Montreux performance will be 
included <mi their next project, tenatively titled ' Night of the 
Living Dregs.'* 

The LP will feature one side of live music from Montreux 
and one side of songs cut in the studio. 

"We've got everv' indication that the record company is 
gonna push like hell on this next LP," Sloan said, sensing 
tiic gruup on the verge of a breakthrough. 

"When we gel up on stage, we communicate; we're on 
fire." 

If the Dregs energy comes across on the live LP as it did 
Monday night, then "Night of the Living Dregs" could well 
provide the push they need to break out of the southern 
boogie eireuit and into a nation-wide audience. 



by robert gibson 



'The night of the 
Living Dregs' 




Review 



On the liner notes erf the Dixie Dregs fu^t 
album there is a short sentence where the 
Dregs say they hope we will all becmne 
believers in their music. On Monday night 
in the Union Ballroom, the Dregs did make 
believers of all on hand as they brought 
their music to town and knocked the crowd 
out with thehr unique style of jazz. 

Opening the bffl at the LPO Halloween 
Spectacular were the Labamba &otiiers, 
who despite havii^ sound troubk due to 
being a last minute fill in, {mt on a veiy 
good. lOKWt show of an origiiial material. 
Hie Labanrtias are defliiitely the best band 
Taflahassee has to offer, and hearmg them 
you woBte when these guys will get a 
recording contract erf thehr own and be able 
to hit the road and stop being "just a 
warm-up band.** They deserve it. 

Next to appear was the area's onlv punk 



band. Mad As Hell. While the audience 
booed them and showered them with 
balled-up beer cups, it was, in spite of 
itself, reacting the way punk audiences do 
in London and New York. Mad As Hell got 
the audience mad as hell and should be 
ver>' pleased with themselves for getting 
this type of response from a Tallahassee 
crowd. 

When the Dregs came on, they came on 
strong. Opening with one of their stylish, 
fast-paced numbers immediately brought 
the crowd to their feet. The Dregs were 
light right from the start and didn't iei up 
for the rest of the night. 

Doing such songs as "Refried Funky 
Chicken," and "Cruise Control," which 
featured a guitar and drum trade off that 
displayed drummer Rod Morgenstein and 
guitarist Steve Morse's talents, the band 
never let the audience's attention wander. 
The mo<;f ponular S'ng of the night, if you 



want to judge by crowd reaction, had to be 
"Gina Lola Breakdown," a funky 
bluegrass-sounding number, that had 
everybody stomping. The Dregs even 
dedicated a song to Mad As Hell called 
"Punk Sandwich." 

"The Night of the Uviog Dregi" is the 
title cut for the baint's aew aflium tluit will 
be released in Jaooaiy. They did the 
number Monday mgte and it souiKled good 
enough to make yoo believe tiiat thehr next 
album will be as good as the previous two. 

The Dregs closed the night with their 
only "dance number" of the evening, an 
upbeat tune where the band stretched out 
and showed their sense of humot with a 
Temptation-type dance routine. 

The unofficial winner of the costume 
contest, incidentally, was violinist Allen 
Sloan who played the entire show in a 
bunny rabbit outfit. 



Count 
|f{)ear 



I he immortal characte 
stam the iiooruw. 
lamstagc production of 
, rniw evening. 

.torv of Cmint 
,hc last few years 
„,uils and numero 
.aatchnick. director 
■ HliKiion. feels that th 
vn. the rest. 
K.it>atchnick, whose 
\y,am " an^ "The 
sta.ed av^av trmn tht 
lanilestaticms (of the st 
^nt. tr>ing to get a 
•fotic connection betwe 
ride." 

To accomplish this t 
ittcmpt was made to 
lizarre, exaggerated t 
iccustomcd to through 
he loss of suspense a 
iiainUins that the piav 
un." a thriller, a good 

Kabatchnick alst) pow 
iDracula" requires some 
and credited Michael M 
in his inventions" in th\ 
Medvey for the hghtirm 
rk, set designer Bt>f 
Uufi Stowell. "be.au 
ontributions to the prot 
The cast of "Count 

count: Michael Fo 
.. Hellsing; and h 
u, stined bride. Nina, 
played by Rod Fairbank 
is portrayed by Lee 
played by Diana Slotzbe 



•He 
V an 



at. 



Black Players Guild 
( iored Girls Who 
Kambow is Enuff 
( enter tomorrow at 5 
nature of audition v 
contacting Janice Jenni 

The pros and con 
transportation of radio 
t* r discussion for rad 

light, hosted b\ Ir i 

Bernhardt C. v\ ar r 
Services, Health and 
Robert H. Davis of 
present the "pro" side 

Tlw "con" point of 
Snitkin; Hartmatt Ram 
Fairbanks, all members 



■ 



A 

Dental 
Vote ACT 



Wednesday, November 1, 1978' 




igazine, 
•coming 
lack, 
iummer 

in said, 
far. 
|will be 
It <^ the 

[ontreux 

paay is 
[sensing 

fe're on 

s it did 
lid well 
)uthern 



next 
two. 



ount Dracula' to 
ippear tomorrow 



by ken lewandoeki 

arts/ fMlvrM tdMsr 

The immortal character oi literature, st^ge and screen 
,11 stalk the floorboards df the Sdiool of Theater's 
Mainstage prodttctkm of "Cbuat Dracala" whidi opens 
iiimorrow evening. 
The story of Cottot Dracola has seen a revival of sorts 
the last few years m Broadway productions, TV 
tnrciais and numerous new books, but Amnon 
.tchnick, director of this year's first Mainstage 
)r djctkm. feels that this product alters significantly 
rom the rest. 

Kabatchnick, whose recent directions include "The 
Last Picnic" and "The Miracle Worker." said that he 
I stayed away frdhi the conventional, bloody, horrific 
jmanifcstations (of the story) by trying to humanize the 
)unf. trying to get a sense of the physical, sexual,' 
)iic connection between the count and his destined 
Ibndc." 

To accomplish this end, Kabatchnick said that an 
lattempt was made to "soften the stylized Victorian, 
Ihizarrc. exaggerated figure which we have become 
accustomed to through Bela Lugosi and others, without 
the loss of suspense and the supernatural aura." He 
maintains that the play remains "a brew of thrills and 
[fun " a thriller, a good melodrama. 

Kabatchnick also pointed out that the set for "Count 
Dracula" require^: some very complicated special effects, 
land credited Michael Murphy as being "quite a wizard 
in his inventions" in this area. He also commended Bob 
Mcdvey for the lighting, Martin Guttleman for his sound ' 
work, set designer Bob Bames, and costume designer 
un Sti)weli, 'because of their devoted, detailed 
contributions to the production." 

The cast of "Count Dracula" stars Andrew Watts as 
the count; Michael Fortner as his nemesis. Professor 
Van Hellsing; and Kathi Diamant as the count's 
dostined bride. Nina. Nina's father. Dr. Seward is 
plaved by Rod Fairbanks; Jonathan Harker, her fiance, 
IS portrayed by Lee Gundenshiner, and her maid is 
played by Diana Slotzberg. 



Cheao Thrills 




Black Players Guild auditions for the play, "For 
Colored Girls Who Considered Suicide. When the 
Rainbow is Enuff ' will be held at the Black Cultural 
Center tomorrow at 5:30 p.m. Questions concerning the 
nature of audition materials may be answered by 
contacting Janice Jennings at 224-1252. 

The pros and cons of nuclear energy and the 
transportation of radioactive materials will be the topic 
for discussion for radio WFSU's "Speak Easy" at 10 

niyhi. hosted by Ira Schorr. 

Bernhardt C. Warren of the Radiological Health 
Services. Health and Rehabilitative Services, and Dr. 
Robert H. Davis of FSU's physics department will 
Prmnt the "pro" side for the discussion. 

I he con" point of view will be presented by Barry 
^>nitkin; Hartmatt Ram, masters in physics: and David 
Fairbanks, all members of the Cattish Alliance. 





" Working for 
^lal €are at tim Health Cente 
Vote ACTION, they're working 

for you. 







Warehouse^ 
aircutters^ 



Subway 



77? 



HAVE AN AfFA/R 

ATRICCtrS 

JAZZ BY THE 
"SOUND AFFAIR" 



Andrew Watts and Kathi Lee 

In other prominent roles are Cree Larkin, Pat Skipper 

and Patrick Moore. 

"Count Dracula" will run Thursday through Saturday, 
Nov. 2-4. and Wednesday through Saturday, Nov. 8-11. 
Curtain is 8:15 p.m. 

Ticket prices for students with valid FSU ID are $2.50 
weekdays and $3 weekends. For the general public, $3 
weekdays, $3.50 weekends. For reservations and further 
information call the Theater Box Otfice at M4-6500 or 
644-6501. 



THE FLORIDA STATE 
UNIVERSITY SCHOOL C 

MUSIC 



pretsnii 

THE UNIVERSmr SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 
PHILLIP SPURGEON, Conductor GERARDO 
a RIBIERO, Viofin 

PROGRAM SIBELIUS: Violin Concerto/SAPP: 

II The Double Image/ELGAR: Enigma Variations 
SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 4, 19f78 - 
I 8:15 p.m. - RUBY DIAMOND AUDITORIUM 

Tickets available now at the Central Ticket Office 
3 in the University Union Building and at the Ruby 
I Diamond Box Office on the evening of the 
performance only. 



Spend an evening with 

me, at 



PicJno Bar 



BAKER AUTO 
PARTS 



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20B Noftft Adeifis 
224-7161 



jhSU STUDENTS: Free with validated 
ID/ADULTS: $3.50 {general admiseion) 
STUDENTS AND SENIOR CITIZENS: $1.75 



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S ports 



Metro toumey time 

Cross country meet will 
determine champs plus 
offer open events 



by geraid ensley 

flambeau sports writer 

It's Metro time, stage one. 

Now in its fourth year, the seven- 
member Metro Conference stages its first 
championship of the 1978-79 school year 
this Saturday as FSU hosts the men's 
Metro Cross Country Championship, 

An interesting feature in this year's 
meet is the creation, at the suggestion of 
Metro officials who hope to make it a 
yearly tradition, of a Metro Open meet 
for the students, alumni, faculty and staff 
of the member's schools. 

In addition to the four divisions there 
will be seven age categories, 24 and 
under, 25-29. 30-34, 35-39. 40-49. 50-59, 
and 60 and over. The first three finishers 
in each of the four broad categories will 
receive plaques while the top three 
winners of each age bracket will receive 
smaller trophies. All finishers will receive 
t-shirts. 

Also running in the open meet will be 
several junior college teams, creating a 
beehive of activity on the FSU golf course 
and dairy farm where the various races 
will be run. thus making for an 
interesting dirt/grass/hills course. 

Registration for the open costs $5, 
which is non-refundable and must be 
submitted with a release form prior to 
Saturday at the FSU track office. The 
men's course will be a shade under five 
miles (8,000 meters) while the women 




John Brogle 



. . . men 's cross country coach 

will run a bit over three miles {5,000 
n|Bters.) The women will go off at 9 a.m., 
tie men at 9:30 a.m.. and the Metro 
championship starts at 10:15 a.m. 

The Metro itself figures to be quite 
interesting with all seven schools, 
including new member Virginia^ Tech 




Tom Herron 

. . . supplies team with leadership 

sendmg teams. 

The meet favorite looks to be St. Louis 
who won last year's championship and 
returns all five members of last year's 
crew. They dominated last year to the 
extent of placing all five runners in the 
top ten finishers. 

Last year's second place finisher was 
Cincinnati, and they figure to be a strong 
contender with the return of Bemie 
Weber, last year's individual champion. 

Memphis State, with the interesting 
recruitment of six English runners this 
year, also figures as a prominent 
contender. MSU, which finished third a 
year ago, has atoeady beaten St. Louis 
once this year. 

After those three teams the rest of the 
field. Louisville, Tulane, Vkginia Tech, 
and FSU have to be considered dark 
horse candidates for the title. But don't 
count out FSU, last year's fourth place 
finisher. 

FSU coach John Brogle is enthusiastic 
about his team's chances. 

"We've been progressing very well 
this season," says Brogle of his 
freshman-dominated team. "We've been 
looking toward this Metro meet as the 
highlight of the season, and firaakiy I 
think we're as ready as we will ever be." 

Though all 18 members of the squad 
will run on Saturday in either the open or 
the championship, the emphasis will be 
on the five freshmen, a sophomore and a 
junior who make up the seven nmnen %f 
the FSU team. 

Foremost among these is the talented 
Herb Wills, a Tallahassee freshman who 
ha^ led the Seminole team all season. 




•*It's like a 
Home Cooked Med 

without 
gomg Home.'* 



MOM^ 
DADS 




MCAT* GR^ • DAT 

OCAT . GMAT 
SAT • VAT • LSAT : 



class Starting 

Nov. 2 
for Dec. exam 



KAPLAN 

CENTER 




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Ryan 



Paid Pol. Adv. by A O 
Ptwto bv Bob Knight 




BICYCLES ^ „ ^ 

by Raleigh, 
Rampar, Ross, A-D 

MOPEDS by F>uch and 

Moto becane 

moped & bicycle work done 
on all models and makes 

210 W. Collage 224-9080 

T1mb(Mten«8hofW 
OnTh«r 



oresents 
AMATEUR COMEI>IAN 
NIGHT AT 

THE 

BQWN 

UNDER 

come House 

TONIGHT 

The WACKIEST comedian will be 
invited to M,C. the COMEDY 
STORES oerformance in the 
coffeehouse Nov. 2,3,4. 



ELECT m RMGE 




ALUMNI gOUNOL PRESIDENT 



A Paid Political Advertisement 
by ttte Rena issance Pa rty 



Begins at 9.-00 
Sign up 238 Union 

BEER POOO 




HEY EVERYBODY, 

I've moved 
from Adam St. Exchonge. 

I'm m>w woriung at 



Donmi Pickett 



14151hMM»M. 31^121 



tency o 
ly in th' 



K without 

Ihout victory, 
vt least that seemed to I 

\den WW saying tb 
FSU lost to Missi 
T7 debacle. TiKWgh ht 
a humofous exar 

rn^uities that day. Bow^ 

,hc mix-up at IheJ 
^„ei which fo«iMl his 
Lrvcd steak and «f8' 
istt ui of thew customar 
i),KS v^hat a ptoyer t 
Mfcc any difference? 

It s mostly psycholod 
and nutrition prott-" 
J, "And while the oi 
[^Tof food the plaver 
toct him mentally, ihc 
effect on his play." 

FSU trainer Don Fauh 

^anie. 

•Nah. it's all psvch( 
jgreed. "The only real 
ihem (the players) pancal 
Is that they are more di^i< 
steak.** 

What the football 
thinking, though, »sl 
loading ' said Dor^ 
coincidentally. marriel 
college f(K)tball player. 1 
know the studies on thar 
done with marathonj 
swimmers." 



Kii 



Home 
Pri 



V 



m 




FLOTIDA FLAMBEAU Wadnatdty, ^kMmb#. i. / 17 



otency of big pregame meal 
nly in the mind, prof says 



by gerald ensley 

f(*mb«au sports writer 

^ dav without pancakes is like a day 

Ithout victory. 

At least that seemed to be what Bobby 
.»den was saying three weeks ago 
f^en FSl lost to Mississippi State in a 
27 debacle. Though he probably meant 
as a humorous example of FSU's 
iifficiiltics that day. Bowden was alluding 
tiie mix-up at the Columbus, Miss, 
^otd which found his players being 
rved steak and eggs for breakfist 
>tead of their customary pancakes. 
Does what a player eat on game day 
any difference? 

It's mostly psychological," jsaid FSU 
! and nutrition professor Dr. Jodee 
orsev. "And while the omission of some 
i\pe of food the player is used to might 
[ffect him mentally, the actual meal has 
effect on his play." 

FSU trainer Don Pauls said much the 

ame. 

"Nah. it's all psychological." Pauls 

jHrced. "The only real reason we give 
[hern (the players) pancakes on game day 
that they are more digestible than, say, 
I steak." 

"What the football team might be^ 
I thinking, though, is carbohydrate 
loading," said Dorsey. who is, 
^incidentally, married to a former 
ollege football player. **But as far as I 
know the studies on that have only been 
done with marathon runners and 




Psyche food? 



swimmers. 



As Dorsey explains it, carbohydrate 
loading is an attempt to overcome 
glycogen depletion, which is known as 
the **wair* to marathon runners. The 
**waH" is that point at which the runner 
feels he can*t run any longer. 

**What they've done with carbohydrate 
loading is limit the athlete's intake (of 
carbohydrates) early in the week, and 
then load up on them just before the day 
of the meet." said Dorsey. **But a 
football player doesn't really need to do 
that because the nature of the activity is 
different. They go in short spurts and 
strength is ^more important than 
endurance." 

What is important to football players is 

turn to NUTRITION, page 19 



Homecoming 
Princess 





STRICKLArJD 



write in 
for 

HOMECOMING 
CHIEF 



■k -k it it ir it ★★★★★★★★★★★ 



COLLEGE BOWL 



ARE YOU GOOD AT TRIVIA QUESTIONS UKE . 
"WHO WAS BURIED IN GRANTS TOMB", OR 
"WHO WAS SHAKESPERE'S WIDOW"? IF YOU 

ARE, GET INVOLVED WITH LPO'S FIRST COLLEGE 
BOWL TOURNAMENT. 



College Bowl is a question and answer game played between 

^ two teams nruKie up of four players each, pkis one attwnate 
teem members must be fuM time students and must be 
registered at FSU during tournament play. No more than two 

graduate students may play on a team. 

FORM YOUR TEAMS NOW; ENTRY DEADLINE 

IS NOV. 8. REGISTER AT 238 UNION OR CALL 

LPO AT 644 6710. 



LPO 



Benefit Concert 

for 

The Food Policy Center 

featuring 

HARRY CHAPIN 

Sunday November 5, 1978 
8:00 P.M. Tully Gym 

$6.00 general admission 

Both Vankie Peddlers 

FSU Union (Wes^/vood Plazai 

Ticket Office 

(Timberlane Shops) 
For further information call 644-6710 

/ ' 

An \ I / P ^ , 0 - — Riptkle Production 



' Sinn 

to 

.1*1 t'llni 



f 




I 



18 / 



I 



9m 



.1. 



1^ 



1! 



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1. 1978 RjOaiDA FLAJyiBEAU 





* A »»TED 
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fU^H DCA4.! OLYMTfA «LE': 
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f fhecc's *^ Mailt ft 





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F0« §15 CALL GARY 4.<W7 




Wo wHI pay 5 dof tarf4iir'«Dr camptes 
O^agaMi mat arenecdecf^or a ifixjy 
ipnpilt' fertr poterr^s. as a 
fwncflon of tm^ironmtmial contamina 
t«>n. Potential donort should can 
6U 6i H t ytw»w tarn iWid 5pm. 

HELP! I HEED 3 TICKET: TO THE 
PL A GAME. I WILL PAY CALL 
KARL A ?22 97t5 anytime befaro 

11 00P.M. 



WANTED TWO TICKETS FOR THE 
FLORIDA GAM£ CALL KATHY AT 

za-Tm OR u4.jKt 



F/mt PMMT, TO SHARE BORM 
OF VERY NICE APT. CLOSE TO 
CAMPUS CALL ANNE S/S^MM 



tU fiAT SPlDfcR - OOOD 

CONOITION St« at 3M Waal 
Tia^s m a st. a a^^w 

VaMMvagon Stationwagor 1771 ^uto 
maffc A-C AM FM radk) excellent 
cantffflan •14W nogatlaMa mmi 

—rr^ 

TOO OOOO TO BE TRUE 

•f7S Vooa ft«!i<-Wi MAU(yr\ ,n good 

condition new t>r^>kf & i>r*f%. wiii not 
•xploda If hit from rear Cat! 
Dawn at UA 4075 M F • to 5 



mONOVA W PIONEER t'TR VERY 

SCTENOABLE, OOaO CONDI- 
>ON,AiiuNasw»cw<a>i 

71 T PA GOOD CONOITION. 
ONL OWNSII, LOW MILBAGC 
•71*737 



4* Impala In good condition Law 

milaaBa naw tirat AaMM liM or i 
oNar. Can — -S-""*^ ^ 



AAOTOR DRIVE FOR CANON F t IN 
GOOD CONOITION PAY CASH 
CALL 224004S OR MISSUS ASK FOR 

JONATHAN 

ROOAAMATE NEEDED-MALE 2 
BORM ATT CASA COROOBA CALL 
57S-7BN 

WANTED FIVE TICKETS TO 
FLORIDA FSU GAME. IF INTER- 
ESTED CALL 044-Onf ANYTfMC 
AFTER 5. 

M Grad student seekr, responsible rm 
M or F. for modern 2br duplex 6m N. 
of town tl124 Vvijt.l Need own br. 
turn. Contact Eric Oietil in Gaog d«pt, 
3rd floor Batlamy Bidg. 

Nadd tamaena fe take over my 
contract at Osceola Hall M or 
F exercise room, pool, sauna, 
carpeted rooms, n^aW 
food. etc. 2220319 



mtVf %mm timor Boot awar SJSWOf 

• CMfVV P'CK UP %iTON TOOL 



M VW automatic, recent tir«*», and 
battery, AM FM stereo, low mileaoa. 
EMcellant condition. CbW mo># 

ILJ?**^^ coND 44peeD 

OOOO TIRES RADIO 1000 



Mm MOB MAUTIFUL raBuItt 
_ frana. naw radials, 
'loo, carpat My partact S7I 



Rmmts. needed for large cooperative 
house. 1 block from FSU. Share rent, 
food, coflOUng, ofhor roopomttrtlitiaft 
'Call JH^^tB^ 

FML non smoker to share very nice 

quiet 2t)drm turn apt close to FSU 
137 moi VMttl-i-SOdepos call 575 0006 

ROOMMATE NEEDED ASAP 
SHARB NICE HOUSE NEAR 
CAMPUS m -¥ Vt UTILITIBS 

224-M09 




gjWtBT; Plasa Apis. ?^>drm funi. 
mtm, flnr. Caff 72* 103» Cai; 9rrff-rr^ 

Large fum. sftxj-c ^z.^ J is "^wnm 
MckidascaMeand -^■-'z.^q^ axiecRaa, 
Apartments, 4<05 Ovn- 
St, Rat. manaaer 222 4505, or 



Osceola HaM fKCtf tent rm poof saunas 
study rm rac. rm efc. Can 224-MQS 
O s f ii a a n a>l»mar 

1 bdr anf in flr iMflie i 

NE Laundry facflHfcs, extra 
many extras aff incHMiea. fsas 
Can 222 39M for app' 



PART TUME 



AAAKE OWN HRS 
and drstriiM/fe Sarah 
S ar Biflo Far 



PART T VE JOBS BIG MONEY: 
Account ---5. ;aw or pre Law stxxJents 
P<^<?*e-<'''e<: A'* aggressive, ar*xijtd*e, 
hungry students okay. Need sales 
raps Oar CPA4^T caMctle home 
sludr pragrams: CaB Jim Dae at 
Totaftape, Inc. TOLL FREE 1400074^ 
7m In Fl. call collact fB«-33KMM1. 
I5as NW MBi Ave. Caiwawilte, Fla, 



WANTED A VIOLIN PLAYER TO 
PERFORM AT A PRIVATE PARTY 

CALL 222 1775 

THERE AAE NO JOBS WITHOUT 

EXPERIENCE. Business Review h 
ooir.ng for pecH>le interested m 
<vr r r,g feievisior n^fwi Evposore and 
Grade avaiiat r:-' '>entative 

wiii oe in 224 dv'- '.fcv> Tn-jrs, and 
Friday at 2p:m. 




TYPING FAST AND ACC - 
TERM PAPERS, DISSERTA CN, 
ETC. REASONABLE RATES 078 2775 



I STRING TENNIS RACQUETS 
One day serv»ce Lowest prices 
town. Call Bill at 57*400 



m 



Keep in Tune 
CRAIG BLOCH PIANO TUNING 
RSSTORATION, MOVtNGS, 
ESTIMATES 
223.SiB0 

~d6 ~ CHAIR VrCAVING AND 
CANING. Good references, reason 
able rates. Call Rhonda around 6 
evanlngs. 57»B5i2. 

Typing IBM ■ fast efficient 

50c per page DBL space. 85c single 

space. Phone 575-3007 or 222 7629 

Let POOR RICHARD'S hem your 
pants or jear>s for only Si 50 (wash 
and dry Ist -♦- bring the shoes you plan 
to wear w them) next to Publix in 
WesNvood Shopping Caniar S70-21M 
Open 7 days a waeK. 



TYPING, FAST. EXECUTIVE 
MACHINE THESIS, PAPERS, ECT. 



SUWANNEE RIVER CANOE TRIP 
Paddle down ttie beautiful Suwannee 

River over xmas break $85 for 3 days 
& 2 nights, cooked meals all paddling 
gear and guides Dec 16-18 ROLLING 
THUND ER R I VER C O, S7002S3 Owcfc 

Our 1979 axpadHfono ) 



BEST QUALIFIED TO SERVE YOU 
PAIOE HINTON 
AUIAANI PRESIDENT! 




Home for 8 mo. old PUPPY. All shots. 
Short hair, bromm and white. Wot! 
bahaved, affactionate. This is your 
chance te B«f o tarrific pat without 

eng ftirough ttie nrtaooy stage, 
caltenttiirith children. 4104 Jackson 

Bluff Rd. Fti. sn-m4 

Naod M or F te lublaaoa my contract 
at Oicaola Hall Pmt laufio OKor.Rm 
fnaWtarvtoa oBw^ rm l^c rm A lolt 
of good food 1B*SBPB anytima 



IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! 
Sand $1.00 for your 2S6^>age, mail 
order catalog of Collegiate Research. 
lO,2S0tw>lCT Itetad. Prompt Dalivary. 

'^^•^^ Calif, mk 



excellent typist witB INM 



TYPING 
TEftV PAPERS. 
Dl SSE R T A T lOtiS 1^ 



ROSIN RYAN FON 

PRINCESS!! LOVE 
YOUR TMETA S.STERS ? 

LYNN MAMRICK, WE LOVE VOIL 
WE NOPf VOU tNHI 



WTlPArTli 



PAfOPOLABV 



•ANTEO FOR TOOkl 
0O« WIRY MiSr' 



CAPITAL CITY 



' E YOU GOOD AT IDENTIFYING 
MOVIE AND TV STAftS? 
If so, «r» n««tf you far a rescarcti 

P^'.. e'.' Z-y^^ X in Psychology 
bunotfig tor a 



TCU 



PtNLLIP QUA YLE smiles 

Wrfie Him in for homecomiing ctucf 



TO 



>iAMRlCK. YOU RE GOltiG 
iHOMECOMtNG PR.'NCESS 



TECHNIQUE AND THEONV 
'2244S3i 




BIG »»LATTER OF SPAGHETTI 
SI JO AT THE PUB U12 W. Tami. 
tlam^pm WM.^ 

The following is • pgiB goMfcal 
paid for by Greg Kirfcpaftricfc. 



academics and food problems— all 
are confronted by FSU students. 
Student govemir shoL - - p— but 
has ft? CNd you ta »f ^ /-^r senator 
after efactteN Ba • .e^'' Do /ou 
know wfN> he-She .s? Have you ever 
seen an ad swwHar to «ie fol l o w in g : 

Have a idea? A p raB ltw Biat Student 
Government could salve? Any 
dar-24 hrs-cail Greg Kirfcpatrick 
576-4526. 

•J" bas-'i Studies 'sea* S'*> 
•■rJeDenoent care 'e 'c 
s';-'^a*fr 1 ha/e t^^-. .v.t. a . .^-^ 
a j z"^- - .^'eran, anc teach 
a CPE 'y* '■■ ^ d., ,v.y Class scnedyfe 
js 9am 7prr. Tues-Thur. MWF are 
free- for senate meetings, CPE, 
rua/. etc. I have the desire and the 

Please note; <n my campaign, no 
posters, handbills, or other TRASH— 
to meet or talk to me, pteasa caMti 

One poiit. party published an idea for 
a new Dorm Residents Council. Their " 

, candidates a-e good, but their 
platform needs help: dorm residents 
don't need to serveon a council to try 
to get stu. gov support— not when the 

- senators listen, and act!!! f pledge te 
rj« the sample ad' once every four 
days starting Mon, Nov 13 and i want 
to Bear from you! Call mi 
Kinqpatricfc. cand., B. Stu. Hom. 

CANOE RENTALS on Wakulla River 
A US 98. Full day & «/? day Cold 
drinks & beer available Open 
everyday except AAon. 925-6412 



OETSOME ACTIOMI 
VOTE PATTY JACKSON 

SOC : AL SC » ENCES mi 

TOm ELLtCOTT 

GOODLLC"- A TH BASIC STUDIES 
SEAT 1 AND A CTION!! LOVE«Psfli 

GET SOME ACTION! 

VOTE SUSIE ROUNTREE 

UNION BOARD SEAT NO.I 

WRITE iN PHILLIP QUAYLE FOR 
HOMECOMING CHIEF! HE KEEPS 
RELATI VELY CLEAN! 

TODAY'S TRADING POST tREAT: 
FREE beverage with hot cornea bee* 
arxj melted swrss cheese on rye lor 
SI 97 Take along a natural anack 
from Laon County Food Cepp. 



g-ti 



GREEK WOMEII 

Fa^ c-r-^ 

R«e 'y -or» 



PHI TAJS SyPPOB- '^r 
•RfNCESS 



TE AMD SCOOP, ANG E 

GOOD LUCiC rg P Ri LEOf f^i 

OAVE GLICKEN 



ROBIN RYAN 
WIMateafliia 



». t 



It COvkCi, 



MICHELOB SPECIAL 

->$c A GLASS 

$1.75 a PITCHER 

NOON TO MIDNIGHT EVERY 

POOR PAUL'S POURHOUSE 



PPNGEO** M.Ar££S 
raig OftD P^.f >*?^t^.^ 
Travelers Let me cr ' 
ctiaracters »o your wor^ ai - . j 

. Call Ne«SOP 1 S39-42ii . 



Tuesday Nites 

MidMlab fl 75 Pifc-*- .X 

7-tWM at Brew & Cue 4S >i Dw. 



Hefp want' e ec* PATTI 

BREWER Homecoming Princess. 
VOTE TODAY! pd pot a4v 



GOOD LUC< LYNN HAMRICK FOR 
HOMECOM'NG PRINCESS. LOVE. 
DAVINA AND JULIE 



STUDENTS ^HC PAir-. 
STOP BY THE -r r K UIIK' 
FILL OUT l^Y :i,£ St»Vt 
FOR FREE CAVP,; I- . 
WOMEN DEMAND CA. 
NOW! 



LYNN HAMRICK, YOU RE OUR 
PRINCESS NO MATTER WHAT 
LOVECINDY ANOGINNY 



DEAR ROBiS 
YOU ARE 
HOMECOMiNi 



LYNN HAMRICK, YOU'RE THE 
BEST FOR HOMECOMING PRIN 

CESS LOVE YA JOE iLOR> 



ELECT So3A\ . 
BOARD SEAT \c 

Pa e p^- 



GOOD LUCiT CL!F CURRY FSU'S 
NEXT HOMECOMING CHIEF LOVE 
THE TA CHI L!L SISTERS 



VOTE CLIF CURRY 
HOMECOMING CHIEF 
pdpol adv 



TO THE PEBi^N -.HC 'Z^l v 
PLANTS FROM ROOM M* UKtC' 
MONDAY NIGHT 
They are of great >e«ti*tw*^9f 

" waoM itite 

.Nc ^^t. 'ons askec - - . ■ *• 
found a wandering jew -. s . *• v 
and yellow mams a oo* ctJvK'^ 
wifii geld foil please brttni nitfr to 



.MB.^ 



GOOD LUCK 

LOVE. BP 



This was 
'¥mm9ikwe stunt 



a ve'y st«M 



Girls, are you looking for a hixurkxis 
evening wtiere you will be served 

wine, cheese along w appr. music? 
AEPI fraterniTy has the answer. Lil 
sis rush party Thurs. Nov. 2 at 
8 30pm, see you there! 



ROBIN RYAN for homecoming 
princess '78 Love, your real sister 

Lauren ! 



HAPPY BITHY RED' 
Thanks *or always bemg a 
6-iend. You re not as ♦8k<r' 
granted as you .thintt ycx are • 
for EVERYTHING fh s w^rr^ef 
needed your invaluable wcdt * 
wisdom. We've drifted apart Lets » 
friends again 

LOVELESA 
PS Hi Leslie just though you d 
see your name in Hie paper 



WALK WHERE THE INDIANS 
WALKED! Backpacking in North 
Carolina in the snow! For Beginners- 
no experience r>eeded. Dec. 18-22 & 
27 31 Limited space! 904-375-0160. 
Collect or 521 NW Tr, GainasvHte 



MONDAY IS HENNA DAY 

Let us chaer up your Mon. wHh a 
natural, organic Henna treatment for 
only 111.95 Choose any shade or 
nuetral. we use only lOOprct. pore 
Persian Henna at jD's for Hair 
222-1112 



Don't worry ROBIN RYAN! 

X2^'}^f,S2J A*AOE! YOU'RE 
THE BESTESTi LOVE, SALLEY 

GREENFACE 
DON'T BE D ANDO 
EVEN THO YOU ARE A W.D. 

I'LL ALWAYS LOVE YA 
(AND SO WILL THE YMWB! ) 
G.F.I -P.P. THE PORKO 



VOTE RUBEN LEMES 

AC : :andidateno < 

RUBEN S THE CANDIDATE 
WHO CARES' 
paid poi adv 



Hair Salon Ut 
presents NEN* 



APPLIANCES 
Will buy and -or haul oft your 
appliances. Call Marshall days 
999-7B79 (pocfcat Boopor) ' 
BW^tM LICENSED^ 



ATTENZIONE DUDA FISHA: 
AKA PH WOOFER 
BUON COMPLEANNO,KP 
YOUSNAKEffi 
MUCHLOVE^D 



The Other Bite 
Platform Lounge 
formally of Ha - 
inh-oductory o«er with nENA 
haircut! Call 224-2^9 or • 

TO SUSAN LANGLEY, 

Thanks for being the best room 
andfrtewd ■■■ ««Mid have! IP* 



LORRIE DAVIS 
'70 HOMECOMING 
PRINCESS YOU'RE 
THE GREATEST 



WED. NIGHT MICHELOB SPECIAL 
25 ON TOP OF THE PUB ON THE 
PATIO Bpm - MIDNIGHT 



CATHY AND JESSIE 
Thanks for making our fam.ty 

ladling to a tree we ove^ 
Th« Prince and the mowff 



"Part of the 
Arts and Scianca 
alllanca" 

DAVID M. LAZARUS 
Arti and Science Seat 4 
N> UNITED SEMINOLES 
pd.pol. adv. 



SOCIAL WOR K AAAJORS 
Get involved! Vote Nov 1 tar I 
Woodaii IND. Pd Pol Adv 



m^JtS^f ^^^^ PATRICK 
BUSINESS SENATE SEAT NO. 5 
, pd pol adv 



HOUSE PAINTING 
WALLCOVERING 
PRESSURE WASHIMO 
experiencad & raatonoBIa 
Call Jaff 224.774S far aotlmata 



Wed. is "Over ttte Hump Nitr' 
Heinekan Draft S3.00 pitcher S.50 
glass 7-19Mn at Brow and Cue 422 N. 
Duval St. 



Vote JEFF SWEENEY lOr 

HOMECOMING CHIEF 
on NOV. 1!!! 

pd. pol. 



Desperatt'ly need 2 tickets to 
FSU-Fla. game. Will pay 
prica.Calf ««44il4. 



Inexpens ve typesetting If yav tMa 
your material on my aBBlBMnMnt. Ano 



FACIAL & BODY HAIR REAAOVED 
Permanently by Elech'olysis. Daop 
cleaning facial treahnent, Ragina 

^^y^^^^ appomtmant 
22-3170. 747 E T4 



Bob h« mavatf from Adams St. to 
joy- SL YOU are invited to the new 
oolon: WOrahouse Haircutters 666-3 
W Tenn St. ph. 222-6664. Haircuts. 
Hennas, Perms, Mahdaan ACV 
shampeoand 



ERES UN CUCMARA MAGNiFjCJ 
MEMACESMUYFBg- 
TEAMO. LOVE.NM_ 

WELL EXCUUuUSE US» 
Our competitors MATE 
"SPEOAL". A haircut, s'^*"'**'? 
co nd l Won I n g Iraatment all fJli 
f6.00 They hate it, but you love 
guess ¥¥ho we want te pi«««- 
call & say you want our spe cial f 
JD'S FOR HAIR where SOV^O 
Si looking good gatagoBMrlO-iiB 



S^GMA KAPPA MAN-BILLY BYRO- 
WE'RE BEHIND YOU ALL THE 
WAY FOR HOMECOMING CHIEF. 



GAY PEER COUNSELIIfG 
individual -I- ConfWantial couraJJJ 
offered through oniv f"*"^*' TSo 
canter coiintact Lucy Kiziriy^ ^^^j^ 

Get your togas out!!!Chr.s MMJJ 
author of ANIMAL MOUSE » 
Lampoon writer, talks or 's 
Funny? 0PM Nov. 6 FAB Aud F R£e_^ 



utritio 

„ ^anie thing that i| 
.^cralt nutrition 
1 here's no ma 
'K,H>tbaII pUy«-'r^ 
Htr needs relate i 
jncrallv bigRer nv 
jhinK carthsh.ik rui <i 
FbuK takes tht ^ 
ic training table y 
Approved by FauK 

•We don't worT> ( 
^)mc kind of iroubU 
.eight changes noticei 
Though Pauls adinil 
•are of all FSU athlrt^ 
vikiorously denu 
Lhnft «n the overall 
• rm reading all th| 
rid. "and we used t« 
liuitrition n^Ho dcvelopj 
'that vfcc use now.** 

The way I look at| 
there talking to those 
h:nc that kind ot timd 
tiHitball program, and 
held, they need to ci>nj 
With facultv mcmhj 
hSl? women athletes 
nutrition, that develop 
Yet the larger que 
will never take the pia 



ARMADILLO 



PASTIME 

Wed. 8 p.m. 
0|ieD9B«H 
Tournameiit 
626 W. Tenn. St 



Complete Hairstyimy w. 
lion, cut II blow dry S4 
balance parms S15 00 
nabtral or color S7. 00 shortj 
$9 00 for long hair All 
students under supervision 
tied instructors. Tall Ce 
Barber Styling. 1221 Apj 
Pkwy Call f77-3iM for app| 
Mondays. 

PIKES PIG ROAST NOV < 
21i South Wildwood Drivp ' 
Cross Creek 8pm All prf 
Seminole Boosters Dmne 



VOTE CLIF CURRY B A< 
BUSINESS SEAT SB HOA/ 
CHIEF 

VOTE ACTION & TOM E 
FOR STUDENT SENATE 
OOODLUCK.CL 

PREGNANT' 

TAPPS offers free test andl 
prr,t-i(.rT. ofegnancies. 22? 
v I AM. TTh 6-0:0 0 ^ '• 

THE TOTAL STUDENT 8^ 
THE ONLY SPECIAL IN 
GROUP ON CAMPUS' 
UNITED SEMINOLES N 
PARTY THAT REPRESI 
OF US Pd. Pol. Ad. 

WE TAKE THE TIMC T( 
RIGHT. Headquarters hai 
parms and great haircuts H 
tars 3017 W. Pansacota St 

Be good to your hair so ^ 
to you Lanham Prodi 
Haadquarters Hatrcutt n 

St. SJ^isn 



WHY NOT THE BE S] 
ELECT PAIOE HINTON 
ALUMNI PRESIDENT' 



THE TOTAL STUDENT Bl 
THE ONLY SPECIAL IN 
GROUP ON CAMPUS' 
UNITED SEMINOLES NO 
PARTY THAT REPRESEI 
OF US! Pd. Pol Adv 



GET YOUR TOGAS Of 
Miller, auttior ot ANIMAL 
Natl Lampoon writer, talks < 
Funny? " 0PM Nov 6 FAB 



KAPPA DELi.M,.> .^Hl GaI 
PSYCHED FOR HOMECO^^ 
LETS WIN IT ALL! ' 

DEAR 
HAPPY Bl^^i 
WITi 



4i 



I,* MORE 

U '"001 rH/r.J '0(, 



celebrates 7^ 

P ep. for i^S 

P. ANGIE 
EN 



^"v- ' Pd. pot. adv. 

JEONMASTERs^ 

M-P^ me bring 
I your world Of oiflicl 

I f 'ipher 35c giajj 

.T^'i/^"^ PARENTS 
^ TABLE IN UNION 
>AY CARE SURVEY 
CAMPUS SERVICE 
[MANO DAY CARE 



RYAN, 
ONE FOR 1978 
l< - PRINCESS 



MR 



J JORDAN UNION 
No 1 NOV isf 
f"^ Pol. Adv. 



' ' «0 STOLE MY 
WOUM 3M UNION 

sentimental value to 
ike them retvrneti 
f If anyone l»as 
■i Jew in a clay pot 
IS in a pot covered 
tas9 bring them to VU 
*s a very stupid S 



ITHYRED! 
ays being a great 
not as taken for 
Itiink you are Thanks 
|NG ttiis summer i 
^valuable vvord» of 
trifted ^rt Lets be 

r'ELESA 

t tt>ough you'd like to 

> the paper. 

BEN LEMES 
NDIDATEN0.4 
iE CANDIDATE 
CARES! 
poladv 

Hair Salon and 
e presents NENA 
airsmith. Special 
witti NENA mt$5 
7 49 or walk In and 



3LEY, 
the best room mtn 
e could have! Lw«» 



SSIE: 

inq our family fl"''* 
afree. WelovejfOM; 

IDA, 

lARAAAAGNlFlCO. 
ACESAAUYFELIZ 
FaAAO. LOVE.MAX^ 

trs MATE our 

laircut, shampoo * 
tment all for onlY 
t, but you love ih 
wtt to please? Jws| 
•nt our special aJ 
liaroMvingnwaney 
1111 



lOUNSELING 
idantial counsel tn« 
iWv mwital h«2^ 

fill Chris 

HOUSE 4 NaH 
ralks on is S»x 
FAB Aud FREE! 



utrition ^im 



same thing that is importairt la everyone, namely 
)od overall nutritian. 

•Tficrc's no magical formula/* said Dora^y. 
Footbtll players need a well-balanced diet. Much of 
etr needs relfle to body w^fjtxt because they ase 
ncrally bigger means they may need mote, bot 
thing earthshaking or special.*' 

Pauls takes the same approach. All FSU players eat at 
training table at the fieldhoiise, with the menus 
proved by Fauls. 

We don't worry (about their ^BeQ until they have 
ate kind of trouble/' Fimte aotsd. "I^e if their 
eight changes noticeably/' 

Though Faids wbiiits to a very busy s^eduie taking 
are of all FSU athletes as wdl as the footbafl players, 
c vigorously denies that nutrition may receive short 
hrift in the overall game plan. 

Vm reading all the time/* says the Ithaca College 
^rad, '*and we used to have a doctor working with us on 
nutrition who developed the drink (sindlar to Gatorade) 
that we use now." 

The way I look at it, i had the thile I'd be avet 
there talking to those profesaocs every day. But I don't 
have that kmd of time, so if they want to help the FSU 
football program, and increase tiieir knowledge of their 
field, they need to come over here and see us." 

With faculty members already planning lectures for 
FSU women athletes (who liave no training table) on 
nutrition, that development may come to pass. 

Yet the larger question seems answered. Pancakes 
will never take the place of a good defense. 




Trainer Don Fauls 

. . . 'professors need to come and see us' 



A FLAMBEAU Wednesday, Novemiier 1, 1^78 / t9 

RUN 



DOWT LET PARTY ROLfllCO 
STUDEWT GOVERNMEWT. 
WHO'LL WORK FOR YOUf 

RICHARD CREENBERG 



I 



ARMADILLO 



FLAMBEAU 

Rm. 306 Union 9 to 4:30 daily 




PASTIME 

Wed. 8 p.m. 

Open 9 Ball 
Tournament 
626 W. Tenn. St. 




Ricurs 


JAZZ 


Features 




Bill Kennedy 


Sax 


LKulsey Sargent 


Piano 



ELECT 



PMC 




ALUMMI COOrCIL PRf S|[ ; 

A Paid Political Advertisennent 
bvftw Renaissance Party 




Complete Hairstyling Wash, condi- 
tion, cut & blovy dry $4.50. Acid 
balance perms S1S.00. Henna's 
neutral or color $7. 00 short hair or 
$9 00 for long hair. All work by 
students under supervision of quali 
tied instructors. Tall. College of 
Barber Styling. 1221 Appalachee 
Pkwy. Call 877 3020 for appt. Closed 
Mondays. 

PIKES PIG ROAST NOV. 4 1978 
218 Sooth Wildwood Drive Featuring: 
Cross Creek 8pm Ail proceeds go to 
Semirwie Boo>lf» Dinner <pm 

VOTE CLIP CURRY & ACTION FOR 
BUSINESS SEAT 3 & HOMWiCOMI NG 

CHIEF EFL 

VOTE ACTION 8« TOM ELLICOTT 
FOR STUDENT SENATE 

GOOD LUCK. CLIP CURRY 

PREGNANT? 

TAPPs offers free test and help in 
problem pregnancies. 222-7177 M¥VP 

30 11:30AM. TTh 6 8: 0 0 PM 

THE TOTAL STUDENT BODY IS 
THE ONLY SPECIAL INTEREST 

GROUP ON CAMPUS! VOTE 
UNITED SEMINOLES-NOV 1-THE 
PARTY THAT REPRESENTS ALL 

OF US Pd. Pol. Ad. 

TAKE THE TIME TO OO IT 
RIGHT. Headquarters has henna, 
perms and oreat haircuts. Headquar- 
♦ers 2017 W Pensacola St. 576 1511. 

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ELECT PAIGE HINTON 
ALUAANI PRESIDENTi 



PHILLIP QUAYLE MAY BE UGLY, 
BUT HE OFFERS MORE IN A 
CHIEF. WRITE HIM IN. TAKE A 
DIFFERENT STAND. BE IMAGIN 
ATIVE. TAKE THE CHALLENGE. 
BE SAAART. 

To my roomate, ROBIN RYAN, 
GOOD LUCK IN THE HOME- 
COMING ELECTIONS! Nancy 

For Alaort i o m . pregnancy screening, 
binti control or health Info, call the 
PeministVWMnen's Health Canler 
224-9600 

VOT£ FOR THE BEST CHOICE 

PATTI BREWER 
Homecoming princess pd poi adv 



FSU FLYING CLUB MEETING 
THURS NOV 2. 7:30 Rm IIS bEL 
CALL BOB 644-6167 

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: DR. GRIGG 
Your Scorpio povver continues to lead 
the iSR to greatness 

We love you, 
Ttie Number Crunchers 

EXPERIENCE, QUALIFICATIONS 
Vote STEVE GELLER for Alumni 
Council President. 
UNITED SEMtNOLES Pd Pol Adv 

FREE DISCO DANCE CLASSES 
Fla. Rm. Union 7pm Wed. Thru 
X mas Nov. 1, 8, 15. for Info. 644-54SB 

Best of luck DONNA ABOOD yoor 

gonna win witfi ACTION PARTY I'm 
with you ail the way Love, Lisa 



AZD PLEDGES YOUR TERRIFIC 
LOV£ YOUR SIS. CIS 

PLAZA FOLKS N24 DO YOU STILL 
LOVE ME? 

PI PHI "Those who bring sunshine 
into the lives of others cannot keep it 
from ttiemselves" Smile Dimples! 

CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR NEW 
DELTA GAMMA NEO PHYTES 

LOVE. YOUR SISTERS 

Lynn Hamrick, Party at our house if 
you win. Love. Rodgers and Kelly 

"Part of the 
Arts and Science 
allience" 

vote: 

DAVID M. LAZARUS 
Arts and Science Seat 4 
OO UNITED SEMI NOLUS 
pd.pol.adv. 

GOOD LUCK DAVE GLICKEN 
FSU'SNEXT HOMECOMING CHEIF 
WE'RE ALL BEHIND YOU. 




Register 255 CHA 

Chenrustry Auditorium 

WEDNESDAY NOV. 1 

Classes. 1,6,8, 13. 15.20 

6:15 10:15 — 150 

FSU Center for 

Professional 
OeveloiMneftt & 
Put>iic Service 

644^1 




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Southern Plasma 



WRITE IN PHILLIP QUAYLE FOR 
HOMECOMING CHIEF! HE^S OUR 
AAAN AT FSUI 



tost Ml POMMI 



314 N. Monroe b 
urgentiv n 




I AM A UNIQUE INDIVIDUAL 
VOTE FOR AME. 



THE TOTAL STUDENT BODY IS 
THF ONLY SPECIAL INTEREST 
GROUP ON CAMPUS! VOTE 
UNITED SEMINOLES NOV 1 THE 

ne^LT ■'■"'^T REPRESENTS ALL 
OF US! Pd. Pol. Adv. 



GET YOUR TOGAS OUT! Chris 
AAiller, author of ANIAAAL HOUSE & 
Neti Lampoon writer, talks on "Is Sex 
Funny?" IPM Nov 6 FAB Aud FREE ! 



WITH YOU ALL THE WAY 
THAT'S PHYLISS DEALER, WRITE 
IN FOR HOMECOMING PRINCESS! 

ELECT PATTI RREWER 

HOMECOMING PRINCESS 
pd pot adv 



S.O. STEPHENS: 

REMEMBER FIRMLY BUT 
GENTLY!! 



FOUND: FEMALE DOG at beer bash 
blonde with black and tan on back, 
knee ^1^gh. Very obedient. Cant keep 
much ionger. PtiMe call 644-216f or 
644-2168. 

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DEAR NORAAAN 
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! 

WITH LOVE. 
fHIMKIN 



PHYLLIS DEALER OFFERS YOU A 
UNIQUE, intelligent AP 
PROACH TO HOMECOMING PR IN 
CESS. WRITE HER IN ON YOOR 
BALLOT. 



Good Luck Tom EHicott with Action 
Party this Wednesday! 

Love V. Anne-Mlcfielle 



LOST! REWARD! Brown 8i white 
Springer spaniel 4mos. old urgent has 
serious illness nee d s medication daU " 
Lost In W. Brevard area Ca ll 

LOST PURSE ON SEMINOLE BUS 

NEED THE ID'S AND GLASSES 
PLEASE CALL ME 644 1698 

REWARD TO FINDER! 
Lost dogs 2 yr. old black8itan german 
shepard, nrtale longish hair, l yr. old 
blond golden ' retriever, female, no 

collars Bot^ dogs tatooed on right 
inner thigh with S.S. no , must look 
closely. If seen or found please caf 
877 4658. 997 3869, 222 8692, 385-7510. 




r 







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PLUS 

OTHER 

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tJigthflftY' 
NATIONALS TO BE HELD AT DAV 








GoUaat. 




Its coamg to 
WURCAMPUS 




SPRfiyG BREAK" 



Florida 



ThuKday 
Novraiber 2, 1978 




Senin?^ Tallahassee for 66 years 



Dollar shoots up after 
Jarter announces plan 



The U.S. <Ml«r mttied dramatically q& 
world money markets yesterday afler 
President Carter announced new measures 
to counter its decline. Japan and West 
Germany, where the dollar rose more than 5 
percent overftight, both hailed the 
measures as opening a **new era" in 
monetary cooperaticm. 

The United States took a series of 
dramatic steps to rescue the ailing dollar, 
including assembling $30 billion in foreign 
currencies to buy dollars abroad and ^e 
sharpest boost sliice 1933 in Americtti btak 
borrowi^ rates. 

Initial reaction was spectacular. The 
dollar shot upward on European markets. 



On Wall Street, where the stock market had 
been slumping badly for a week, trading 
was heavy with the Dow Jones average up 
more than 20 points by noon. 

Following "around the clock*' discus- 
sions over the past week. President Carter 
himself announced tiie Treasury and 
Federal Reserve Bo»d had initiated a 
series of coordinated actions ainied at 
halting the dollar's steep decline abroad. 

They also inducted doubling the amount 
of gold to be auctioned by the United States 
each month and i new reserve requirement 
for banks to encourage them to borrow from 
foreign banks. 

The surprise moves were needed. Carter 
said, because the dollar's siistained drop 



** threatens economic progress at home and 
abroad and the success of our anti-inflation 

program.** 

As the dollar ridlied, the price of gold 
abroad tumbled, falling by $23 an ounce in 
Zurich to close at $220.50 compared with 
$243,875 Tuesday. In London gold dosed at 
$227, down $15.12 from the previous day*s 
$242,125. 

The long-hoped-for Carter announcement 
brought unanimous praise from leaders 
of Britain, Japan, Switzerland and Germany 
and promises of future cooperation to keep 
the dollar strong in a wOTldwide fight 
against inflation. 



Poll: FSU favors Graham 5:2 



by Steve taylor 
and danni vogt 

flambeau writers 

The FSU community favors gubernatorial 
candidate Bob Graham by a whopping five 
to two margin over opponent Jack Eckerd, a 
straw ballot conducted yesterday by The 



Flambeau revealed. 

Sixty-six percent of students and faculty 
surveyed would have voted for Democratic 
hopeful Graham if the election were held 
yesterday, while only 25 percent would have 
supported Eckerd, his Republican adver- 




UStra 




1) If the gubematotiai 
electbn wers| ^Id today, 
would voiV 

Kepublican Jack Bckerd ot 
Ocniocrat Rob Graham? 



2) Would you vote yes or no 
to allow casino gambling o|^^ 
Flodda's gold coast? 




3) Would you vote for or 
against constitution revi- 

guarantee t^^;^^^ could 
be deprived 1^ my ngki m 
the basts of sex? 



4) Would you vote j^*^' 
against constitution revi- 
sion 8, which would make 
the Board of Regents a part 

the state constitut«>n and 
^vouid make the M|| board 

education ap^"""**'*'' 





for 
36 



25 



undecided 



no 
40 



li W i U i 1 ' t!\ ! 



against 



tgainst 
24 



undecided 




undeaded 

8 



undecided 
40 




sary. Nine percent were undeci^M. 

The Flambeau randomly selected 75 
students and.25 faculty members and asked 
their opinions in telephone interviews on 
four items appearing on tlie Nov. 7 
statewide ballot. 

Results were compiled using data only 
from those who are registered to vote in 
next Tuesday's election. 

The poll revealed the FSU community 
opposes by a narrow margin allowing casino 
gambling in South Florida, but overwhelm- 
ingly supports constitution revision 2, which 
bans sex discrimination. 

More people are undecided than either 
for or against constitution revision 8 which, 
among other tMngs, would provide for an 
appointed state board of education and 
would coostitittioMdly empower the Board 
(^ Regents to manage the State University 
System. 

A slight minority of studoits favor the 
establishment of casino gambling along 
Florida's Gold Coast, but faculty members 
overwhelmingly <^pose its legalization. 
Fifty-two percent of the studeirts surveyed 
support casino gambling, yet more than 
twt^-thirds of the focutty qaestkMied oppose 
it. 

Surprisingly, the majority of faculty 
polled are undecided on revision 8. a 
proposal which deals with the state's 
educational system. 

A ^eater percentage of students than 
faculty among those polled favor 
constitutional sISMta for the Board of 
Regents as well as an appointed state Board 
of Education. 



Action party 

annihilates foes 
in FSU student 
senate elections 

by jeff mangum 

(iambcau staff writ»f 

Action party t(xik a solid lead early las* 
night in student government electtof. 
returns and maintained the pace to claim 31 
out of 43 student senate seats and all foui 
I'nion Board scats, atter only about 2.701 
students made their way to the polls earlie 
in the day. 

The United Seminoles. political party o 
student ; . d> President Neal Friedman 
took a beating, winning only seven senatf 
seats outright. Runoffs are slated betweer 
the two parties for Arts and Sciences seats 
one and two and Social Science seat one. 
Independent O.C. Allen and former student 
body President Greg Girard won, running 
as special students. ' 




Election day 

. . .FSU students fine up yesterday m 
the Moore Auditorium poll to vote 

Dave GlIdLea and Ed StricUaad made A 
ninoHi nut of a crowd of seven vymg fe 
Itonecomii^ Chief . Robyn Ryan and Lynn 
Hamrick wiU foce each other in the 

Homecoming Princess runoff. 

A straw ballot on Florida's cdntioversial 
casino gambling amendment was split with 
65 voters opposing the measure and It 
students giving the okay for gambling on 
the gold coast. 

**I think we worked real bard,** said 
Action candidate spokesperson Randy 
Drew. "Overall it was a real low key 
campaign. For the first time in years, there 
was no mud-slinging** between the parties. 
Drew observed. 

"We got blown away." United Seminole 
honcho Steve Geller told his supporters 
gathered in the Business Building late last 
night, where they waited lor the final 
results. 

Polls closed at 7 p.m., and most of the 
results were tallied by computer in the 
Business School after being covflted at the 
Office of Evahiation Services. 

Some, however, had to be tallied by hand 
because of problems at the Strozier Library 
and Bellamy Building polls. Numbers on 
the computer sheets filled out by students 
did nrr correspond to those on the ballot, 
according to United Seminole Party 



131 
O 



h 4 1 



r 




i 



Pi: 



p V^..o--So^7 -•OTP FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



11 



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Large 32oz.^ 





I-IO is now open all the way 
from Jacksonville to Pensacola 



by jim c^ox 



AAcm yesterdav ended 




Tarn Weiib a cbaige of tfae DOT aad leave 
them akiDe to get die job done/* the 
governor said. The statement re^ierated his 
belief that state cabinet positioBs sboold be 
appoinied ntte* than deded poatkms. 
Askew said he ioels diat this raeasme will 
to dBBiBiMe iJ i iiiai cnit in ribinrt 



of wok on 

eUCTds from 
cfGmd Ridge to 
12 Math of Qniacy md feataces 
environmentally ptotective measures 
designed to save the marine hie of the 
Apodac^icc^ River. The opening of lAis 
fiaal iiak m Honda allows the highway to 




Tbe completion of the I-IO segment wffl 
cut the driving time from TaMakassee to 
Pensacola by 20 to 30 i niinrtr i , aoooidmg to 
Weiib« cutting tiK f w taet wrnkta^ 

by some 10 to 13 aafes. 

Mm in anendance was Ix. Gaw. 
candidate Wayne Mixson, wkom Askew 
introdaccd as the "aezt Itentcnant 
' and Rep. Don i^uina, D-Altfcta. 
aBed tke niinili liiwi indicative 
of the **1^ut adminKtrative waA*^ wkich 



ally 

t project he wortod* 
rAeOOT 



23 



ago. 



Florida's interstaie 



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by dermis 

Of all eight prop 
the Florida ' 
received ni 
revision 2. the 

I he league of Wj 
National Organi/al 
(NOW), and Com? 
taunchest suppo 
Right to Life, u 
Responsible Legts 
fhcir opposition t« 
The revision ad< 

lo a provision 
constittttion forbi< 

{too on the basis oi 
P hysictan handica p 
Moat of those 
roini-ERA" clain l 
would constitute a| 
Florida Icgislatur* 
attonal ERA, 
lefcated twice in tl 

Us most recent def^ 
by a 2M9 margin 
Most polls indict 
pass overwhelming! 
Slaney. lobbyist fc 
rgantzation plans 
lobbying tool. 

**Many senators 
ERA because they I 
teel their coBstituej 
of it. We plan i 
district analysis of 

them what their 

feel." Slaney said. 

Sen. Phil Un^I 
senate president 
opponent of both 
federal ERA's. sai( 
opposite. 

**if the Stat 
overwhelmingly, 
mandate to not 
one,'* Lewis sai* 
revision 2 will s 
opposition to fedei 
Florida's problems 
"We don't want 
to determine our 
West Palm Beach. 
Among other thi 



Carter 



WASHINGTON 
signed into law * 
American t li^i^ < 
attend a)llegf 

It IS specificall, 
additional 1 .5 mili 
of S15.0(X) to S2- 

The bill woul(i 
students eligible 
what their parf*nt 
then 10.5 pcrcmt 

The bill also cr.i| 
income limit for a 
teed loan while ir; 



■ .J 



Florida's ERA battle shifts 
from legislature to polls 



by dtfinit imi iqu — n 

ft«H writar 



Of all eight proposed revisions to 
the Florida constitittioii, none Ins 
received more attention than 
revision 2, the so-called "state 

ERA." 

The League of Women Voters, iim 
National Organization for Women 
(NOW), and Common Cause are its 

staunchest supporters; Stop ERA, 
Right to Life, and Women for 
Responsible Legislation are united in 
their opposition to it. 

The revision adds the word "sex" 
to a provision already in the Florida 
constitution forbidding discrimina- 
tion on the basis of race, religion or 
physician handicap. 

Most of those in favor of the 
"mini-ERA" claim that its passage 
would constitute a mandate to the 
Florida legislature to pass the 
national ERA, which has been 
defeated twice in the Florida Senate. 
Its most recent defeat, in 1977, was 
by a 21-19 margin. 

Most polls indicate revision 2 will 
pass overwhelmingly. If it does, Tina 
Sianey, lobbyist for NOW, said her 
organization plans on using it as a 
lobbying tool. 

"Many senators have opposed the 
ERA because they said they didn't 
tee! their constituents were in favor 
of it. We plan to do a district by 
district analysis of the vote and show 
them what their constituents really 
feel." Sianey said. 

Sen. Phil Lewis, the incoming 
senate president .and a leading 
opporjent of both the state and 
ft ilcral ERA'S, said he believed the 
opposite. 

**If the state ERA passes 
overwhelmingly, it will be more of a 
mandate to not pass the federal 
one,** Lewis said. The passage of 
revision 2 will signal the people's 
opposition to federal courts solving 
Florida's problems, he maintained. 

"We don't want the federal courts 
to determine our lives," Lewis, D- 
West Palm Beach, said. 

Among other things, opponents of 



Sen. Phil Lewis, 
contrary to most, says 
he beheves the passage 
of revision two would 
signal voters' 
opposition to federal 
courts solving 

Florida's problems 



the state ERA dmm H wiB 
child support payments and alimcmy 
illegal; that laws already exist whidi 
ensure the equality of the sexes; and 
that it will result in a flood of 
litigation and grant the courts too 
much authority. 

According to Renee Anderstm, 
lobbyist for Stop ERA and Women 
for Responsible Legislation', 12 
Florida statutes and three federal 
laws guarantee equality. 

**They (proponents of ERA) say 
we're not for equal rights. We are — 
we just don't believe the amendment 
is going to get them," Anderson 
said. 

The ERA opponent cited the Equal 
Pay Act of 1%3. the Civil Rights Act 
of 1964 and the Equal Employment 
Act. 

*;We could simply enforce the 
laws we have on the books," she 
said. 

Lois Harrison, prudent of the 
Florida League of Women Voters, 
said the enforcement of existing laws 
is * 'ridiculous." She said there is not 
enough money for enforcement. 

In Harrison's opinicm, the courts 
would not be flooded with litigaticm. 
She said part of the reason the courts 
are overburdened now is that women 
don't have the rights a state ERA 
would give them. 

A judge would hear a particular 
discrimination case one time. 



Harriscm contended, and it- would 
**set a precedent." 

**lt is d^ficuh to imagine why 
anyone would oppose ^is simple 
statement of fatraess," she said. 

Karen ft ^imi n c r a , ooonKnator of 
the local chapter of the Lei^ue of 
Women Voters, views'die revisicm as 
**a clear statement to the oovrts and 
the tegislatare that they're not to 
judge or pass a law tiiat would 
discriminate on the ba^ df sex." 

Mirminera said advantage of 
revision 2 is that Florida will be 
protected from federal intervention. 

"Revision 2 is basically a state's 
rights issue," she said. 

A comnK>n complaint of anti- 
revision 2 forces is that if passed, it 
would lead to widespread abortioB 
and homosexoalfty. 

^'it would open the way for 
homosexuals to have ^qiial rights," 
objected Susan Ctiappei, an 
anti-ERA lobbyist. 

Anti-gay rights cmsi^er Anita 
Bryant has charged that the 
amendment is a **gay rights 
ordinance." 

Florida Common Cause yesterday 
labeled that charge * 'patently 
absurd." State ERA coordinator for 
the citizen's lobby, Jerty Cope, said 
16 other states have such laws, and 
none of them have "invalidated laws 
which prohibit homosexual manri- 
age." 



Z 19» / 3 

Gala Inauguration I 
Celebration! TODAY I 

7:30 p m Leon -Lafayette Room I 
— Oglesby Union I 
Union speakers, ref i eitnn e ni^ I 

and entertainment. I 
All graduate students and UFF I 
memtters welcome! I 

OGELSBY UNION I 



GSU 

f 



A 






Cc^rter OKs loan bill 

WASHINGTON (UP!) — President Carter yesterday 
signed into law a bill that makes virtually every young 
American eligible for a federal grant or subsidized loan to 
attend college. 

It is specifically aimed at providing grants for an 
additional 1 .5 million students from families with incomes 

of $ 1 5 .000 to $25,000 a year. 

The bill would make the additional middle income 
students eligible for outright federal grants by limiting 
what their parents have to pay for education to no more 
then 10.5 percent of their "discretionary income." 

The bill also erases a current $25,000 adjusted family 
intome limit for a student to get a government— guaran- 
teed loan while in school. 



London Fog ... 
fashion in any wmMiMt. 




Charlotte 



If you've been looking for the perfect coat, your 
search is ended It's here, this super-trench of 

Fortrel* poKc'for and cotton goes out on its own. 
Or, if the tcrnpt>rdture drops, /ip-in the lining of 
super warm wool. Because London Fog*^ doesn't saw 
fashion for a rainy day. 




-NiCS CHAR6E- 





I 



3 



€lir&» Miller 

Writer for Natianal Lampoon 

and 

Co-author of Aninial Hi 



IS SEX tUNNY? 
Find out in: 
Chris Miller's Story Hour" 

Where, Etc.: Monday, Nov. 6, 8 PM, Mainstage 




COMMUNICATIONS 



Florida 




Our choice for governor 



Bob Graham 



Bob Graham is our choice for Florida's next governor. 

Graham has \oMkg been among higher education's 
leading supporters in the Florida legislature. As 
diairperson oi the Senate education committee, he became 

recognized as one of the foremost experts <m Florida's 
education system. 

His Republican opponent, Jack Eckerd, admits he. 
doesn't even understand the educational funding process. 
And despite the fact he donated enough money to have a 
private college named after him, education doesn't seem 
to be among Eckerd *s top priorities. 

Graham has been a supporter of the Equal Rights 
Amendment since it was first introduced, and has a 
generally creditable record on civil liberties. 

Eckerd, by contrast, after weeks of waffling, finally 
confessed his opposition to the ERA. Eckerd has shown 
considerable disrespect for the Bill of Rights on numerous 
occasions in his business and political life. 

In fact, waffling has been a hallmark of the Eckerd 
campaign. He has repeatedly refused to advance specific 
proposals on tax 'reform, economic development and 
educational finance. Even the vague plans he has ofilered 
frequently have been contradictory from one week to the 
next. 

While Graham's campaign has not been a model of 
specificity, he has at least offered concrete proposals on a 
number of issues and held to them consistently throughout 
the campaign. 

Eckerd promises his tax plan finally on Friday. Graham 
released his weeks ago. 

Our support for Graham is not without reservations, as 
indicated in our previous editorial endorsement of Graham 
in the Democratic run-c^s over Bob Shevin. 

We take sharp exception to Graham's support for capital 
punishment, nuclear power and strict marijuana laws. 
Additionally, we are far from convinced a millionaire can 
get the flavor of an "ordinary" working person's life by 
working one day each at 100 different jobs. 

Though we do not expect Graham to die in office, we are 
nevertheless offended by his choice of Wayne Mixson as 
his running mate. Mixson for years has been 
uncomfortably closely aligned with Florida's agribusiness 
interests, and has been a leader in the legislature of efforts 
to deny basic decency and justice to farmworkers. 

Eckerd, however, shares all Graham's shortcomings and 
then some. ^ 

BoliGfahrai, fai tiie final analysis, is ^likely niccessor 
to tlie office Gov. Reubtn Askitw will be vacating. We can 
count on him to continue Askew's progressive and 
enlightened attitudes towards Florida's politics and its 
people into the next decade. 



Ftorida Flambeau Foundttion Inc. business and advertising office 206 N. 
WoddMMird Avenue, phone 644-4076; N e ws roo m 204 N. Woodward Avenue, 
pnone oW'ODiiof irooucoonrNieiMifpe wo «iie urawwiy Pinion, pnone 
644 6744; CiMiifisd ad office 306 University Union, phone 644-6786. MaKnQ 
P.O. BoK U-7001, Florida StMa University, 



Steve Watkins Editor 

Beth Rudowske . . News Editor 

Sidney Bedingfield Sports Editor 

Danni Vogt Assistant News Editor 

Ktm l iftwanrinfiki Arts / F^4^fairffs Editor 




NOOffWaBE^iJlMMEUSIf* 



sir HERE. 

CN Ttf 



A coincidental possum tale 



Free Estimates 



by Clara raulerson 



The nox was lit by lex of Luna, 
And ^twas a nox most oppor- 
tuna 

To catch a possum or a coona; 
For nix was scattered o^er this 

mundus, 
A shallow mix, et non profun- 

—Carmen Possum 
(Song to a Possum) 
Of Unknown Authorship 

I set great store by coincidence. 
I figure that if a particular person 
or place or thing keeps cropping 
up in your life, it would behoove 
you to pay it some mind. Maybe 
someone is trying to tell you 
something, or point you in a new 
direction, or let you in on some 
eternal mystery. As Paul 
Krammerer. the Austrian biolo- 
gist, used to say, seriality is "the 
umbilical cord that connects 
thought, feeling, science and art 
with the womb of the universe 
which gave birth to them." 
(Krammerer killed himself when 
he was 46, so maybe he knew 
something that the rest of us 
don't know.) 

Being a serious and conscious 
observer of coincidence, I have 
noticed a lot more possums (O- 
possums for the literalists) about 
as of late. First, there was Kay 
Possum who sits on the second- 
story windowsill of my friend 
Rick's bedroom and stinks to high 
heaven when it rains and she gets 
wet. Then there was the possum 
who sniffed by the door of my 
apartment, and who may, in fact, 
be Kay Possum (1 live in the same 
building as Rick). The second 
possum must have been looking 
for food and caught scent of the 
bowl of milk that we keep outside 
the front (and only) door for Sam 
the Cat. (I later learned tfiat 
possums have notoriously accu- 
rate noses when it comes to 
locating food.) 



The hungry possum created 
such a ruckus with its loud 
sniffing that it woke us up and my 
husband, upon opening the door 
to investigate, found himself face 
to snout with a large possum. 

"I don't believe it," he said 
(my husband, not the possum). 
"There's a huge possum out 
here! Clare, there's a possum out 
here. Come see it." 

"No thanks," I said. I do not 
like to look at possums, they give 
me the creeps. 

"Don't you want to see it?" 

"Nope." 

"Okay," he said, thereupon 
taking up a handy book and 
saving it at the possum and 
intoning his sure-fire possum 
repellent call — "G'wan! Get out 
of here you possum! Get!" 

The possum didn't really want 
to go and just sat there looking at 
my husband, or rather, ignoring 
my husband and his waving and 
shouting. "It was like I wasn't 
even there," he said. (I have 
also learned since then that this is • 
a habit of possums, to neither 
look directly at you nor to look 
away from you, but rather to state 
into space in your general 
direction as if it were pondering 
imponderables and ooulkl sot be 
bothered by your pieseiice.) At 
last, the possum moved on, 
waddling down the hall, aiid 
making its way down the stairs to 
the ground floor. 

The next day we spotted a third 
possum at a house we weie 
painting. This possam (who 
cannot in all feasibility be Kay 
Possum) was trapped in a large, 
plastic garbage can. It had 
crawled into what is commonly 
referred Jo as **possura*s 
heaven" during the night and 
could not crawl out again. 

* What will we do about it?V L 
asked, trying to position myself 
downwind from the possum. 

"Dump it out." my husband 



said, picking up a stick to fend off 
the beast, should it attack him 
once released, and pushing :he 
garbage can over: The possum 
scampered away with a speed 
remarkable for such a rotund 
animal. It was then that I decided 
I had better pay some attention to 
possums. What could they be 
trying to tell me? 

I don't know much about 
possums, although one of m\ 
earliest olfactory recollections is 
the smell of a decomposing 
possum, lying smashed on the 
side of the road that we took to m\ 
grandparents' home in Palm 
Valley. There were lots of 
possums and armadillos and hie 
black snakes at my grandparents 
house, but of the three, 'he 
possums were the least talked 
about. They didn't do any real 
damage, like the burrowing of 
armadillos, and they weren't as 
scarey as the snakes. 

Lacking any real knowledge 
about possums. I went to the Leon 
County Public Library. 1 was after 
information that might help me 
decipher their message, if an>. to 
me. I found out a lot of stuff about 

possums like: 

•the possum has a 21 -bean 
brain (the number of beans that 
will fit in a possum's brain), as 
opposed to the 150-bean brain of 
the racoon. 

•the possum was discovered by 
the Spanish explorer Pinzon in 
1500. and caused quite a stir it 
the oottft «f Fentettwl 
IsabeHa, 

•the possum is a marsupW 
mammal, related to the kangaroo, 
who lH» a pouch lor reafiag to 

*r a toog time people thought 

thi^ possums copulated through 
the nose and that later the oiotlKr 

possum blew the babies out of rts 
nose and into its pouch. (This idc» 
has smce been corrected.) 

•that Franklin D. KoostnOi 
went on a possum hunt in ^^'^J 
Sulphur Springs, Ga.. in 1930 and 
later ate roasted possum an^J 

turn to FREE ESTlMAm 




-LORIDA FLAMBEAU Thursday, November 2, 1S7S / 




Fans getting bum rap 

Jumm 

It appears that FSU football fans in general and the 
students in particular are about to get a bom rap! For 
iliose of you who don't know, since nothing has appeared 
ia The Flan^au on this important issue to date, the Leon 
County Grand Jury has recommended to the City 
Commission that stricter controls be brought on the 
crowds at FSU football games, including a strict 
prohibition of alcohol on the premises. These actions were 
mothrated by the rowdiness of the crowd at FSU's recent 
game against Ctncimiati. 

Certainly the conduct of the crowd was absolutely 
deplorable, but there were a couple of extenuating 
circumstances at this game that should be considered 
before anyone moves to take rette^al actkm with any sort 
of self-ri^Meous zeal. 

The first of these circumstances that should be 
considered is the sideline antics of one . of Cincinnati's 
players, whose last name was Alexander, et^er number 
72 or 73. Anyone who saw this person cavorting about 
would have no doubt that he was intentionally doing this to 
aggravate the crowd. 

The second of these drcumstances that contributed to 
the bad disposition of the crowd is more far reaching and 
worthy of much more consideration. This was a very 
clumsy incompetent bust by the FSU police one of the 
football fans, which the crowd believed was for smoking a 
joint. The fan was dragged from the stands in a 
hammerlock by a large, obese, middle-aged placeman 
with a cigarette dangling from his mouth; a crusty-looking 
indhddual who looked like ^ would have been^more in 
place as a fry cook k a greasy spoon restaurant. The crowd 
responded with boos and jeering and began throwing ice 
and other debris. 

What is konk about the situation now^is that It is the 
head of the FSU pdice, WiXI&Bm Tanner, who Is one of the 
most vocal in calling for ^e new crowd control ordinances. 
Mr. Tanner, before you call for more restrictkms on the 
public at large, I respectfully suggest that you put your 
own house In order. What is needed on the FSU police 
force b a younger, cooler group of people who are more 



capable of handHi^ huge-crowd situatioM. If these 
changes aren't made 1 fear that at sonetime there could be 
a serious and dangerous confrontation. 



Library should remain 
open at all times 



E4ilart 

For almost four years now, 1 have been a student at FSU 
and have been subjected to many poBdes 1 do not agree 
with. This letter amies as an attempt to dmnge one such 
policy. For as long as I can remember, the Ubcary has 
closed its doors from raiihiight until 8 a.m. Monday 
through Saturday, and from midnight ui^ 2 p.m. on 
Sunday. At an mstltution where tiie attainment of 
knowledge is the main priority, the shutting down of a 
.major source of this knowledge, for any period of time, is 
inconsistent with this pricnrity and cannot be tolerated. 

The library is closed for 62 hours each week, more than 
one-thurd of the time. Students should not be denied 
access to a library their tuition money is helping pay for. 
And afrer all, how much could it cost, anyway? 

I recall the time two years ago when my girlfriend and I 
studied for exams under a streetlight because of university 
policies. She was a resident of Reym^ds Hall, an all-female 
dormitory, while I resided at Broward Hall, an all-male 
dorm. Uttiver^ty housing policy required (and still 
requires) members of the opposite sex to leave these 
dorms at midnight, including the study/kmnge areas 
provided by each: We were denied access to the dorms our 
housing money was paying for. and to the library our 
tuition money was paying for. 

I believe it is time to reassess (niorities. if the 
attainment of higher education is to be a paramount goal of 
this university, then its library should remain open to its 
students at all times. 

Greg Foster 



Free Estimates 

from page 4 . 

sweet potatoes. 

There i& even a Possum Growers and 
Breeders Association, Inc. (PGBA) tiiat 
was founded in 1971 by Basil Oark and 
boasts of ov^ 40,000 men^^. The PGBA 
has an Intmuitlonal POssum Show at tiie 
Chihon County Fav m Clantcm, Ala., each 
year where they judge possums and elect a 
Possum Queen and proselytize ^bout tiie 
possum as a protein soured for rural 
people. (* 'Nothing is sweeter than a peach 
fed possum.*' — Basil Clark.) Besides 
being a good, albeit unorthodox, source of 
|m>tein, Gark swears that possums are 
**the most powerful aphrodesiac known to 
man. Every time I butcher one, that musk 
gets on me and the girls nearly run me 
crazy. Like to get attacked right in the post 
office.*' (Maybe there is a libidinous 



rationale to the bumper sticker **Eat More 
Possum." 

An very interesting; if I was in fourth 
grade aqdneeded a nature report I'd be all 
set. But what are the fiirry little devils with 
the naked ears trying to teU me? Do I need 
to eat more possum? Is it time for me to 
visit my grandmother again? Should I 
reject my vegetarian ways and bake a 
possum for Sunday (Hnner? I can't figm it 
out. Maybe it wlH come to me in a dream. 

In closing, let me just say that in all this 
research I uncovered a mess of possum 
recipes and if anyone out there is 
interested in catching a possum and baking 
it, just send a stamped, self-addressed 
envelope to The Flambeau and 1*11 send 
you an autographed possum recipe free of 
ch^ge. (All requests should be marked 
**Pdssum Recipe** so they*ll know it*s not 
just another angry lett^.) 

To quote the immortal Pogo — Cc^o 
Er^ Possum. 



nMcUaffype 

typesetting 
paste-up 
velox services 

Rm. 314 University Union 
1644-5744 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 




7 





/ 



/ 




UEARN TO FLY AS A 
CHARTER MELMBEIR Or 
THE F.S.U. FLVIftG CLUB! 
'ALL ARE WETLCOME: AT THE 
MEETING^ THURS. MOV 2. IN 
RM. lie BELLAMY AT 7 30 RM. 
FOR MORe INFOl CALL BOB AT 



iii 



MM 



Both Yankie Pedders 
FSU Union 
Ticket Office - 



AnM. 




Benefit Conceit 

for 

The Food Policy Center 

featuring 

HARRY CHAPIN 

Sunday Novmnber 5, 1978 
T 8.-00 P.M. TullyGym 

$6.00 general admission 



Poor Richards 
(Westwood Plaza) 
Andy's Island 
(Tmnberiane Shops) 
For further information cal MMS710 



p 0 ~ — Riptide Production 



VE..NC!M HALL 



Now at 



PASTIME 

Thuie. %>.m. 
Ladies 6-SaUToum. 
82i W. Term. 



HAVE AN AFFAIR 
AT Kli CirS 

JAZZ - BY THE 
"SOUND AFFAIR" 



•••••••••••••••••• 

• 

: ABAC AUTO PARTS 
! Student Discounts 
I 809 W.Madison St 



Warehouse 
HtUreutters 



Next to 
Subway 






Thurs.^ Fii.^ Sat. 



210 S. ADAMS 



f On the new DOWNTOWN COMMONS ) 




Survey 



their courses 



toy fciif RiMiQiMn 



afl goes a madhn to plu* FSU 
be able to dHHBb tim^ as **FSU Shoppor's G«ide*'aeit 
qeartcr t» help ciioose courses awl tbe mstnctofs that 
come akmg witb theoi. 

The gskle. published by the Stodeat Omammtr Uwkm 
(SCU). will list student re sp on se s to qnestioiis aboat 
faculty accessibilit>-, relevance of eiams to coorse 
matenai. and an individiial tnstractor's fucness in 
grading. 

**Weli snrvcy niost^ basic studies classes and 300 
ievci covses/* Stedent My Iftesideirt Neal Friedann 
said yesterday. "Whea yom get iali 
you pretty Mch know who tbt good praCi 



•The stMleirt suvey «ii he dam at the ead of 
(garter, probably ahoat tiio weeks before fiarii,'* laid 
Dave Seftcft. aa SCU aeadicr who helped the wrvey 



**Wewaattodoit 
so stadeats wi have 
the 

Facalty 
strfliate 
resatos to be 
attheb^^uung 
A 

said, oaly isled 



to the cad of the 
eaough imprenaoas «f the 




« the Uuivcisily of 



Florida aad the 



FANS representative to speak tonight 



a representative of the 
organized Fight to Advance our Nation's Sports ^ANS), 
win spcMk on '^Students, Education aad faiieroaB^iiate 
Athletics*' tonight at 8 in Room 1 19 BeDamy. 

FANS is a Ralph Nader- sponsored prefect that aims to 
advance the rights of fans in the marketplace of 



pto fc& si aaal sports. The Center for PSutidpant Ed a ca t io a 
(CPE) is pr e senti ng Brennan's address. 

''Becanse of the large araoont of stadeat aioney whkh is 
allocated to intercollegiate athletics, students have, in 
effect, become consumers of athletics with no control over 
the final product." Brennan said. 




TEE of the Religioa 

today at 3:30 p.ra. i 



departmem wiB 
I Boon 213 WSfians. 



VOLUNTEER TAULAHASSEE. Leon 
County's Voluntary Action Center, is 
currently seeking Volunteers to help with 
various human service needs. Tutors, 
receptionists, typists and persons offenng 
transponaiion for the handicappe d are 
most ursentiy sought. Further information 
is d\a able by calling 224-0581 between 9 
a.m. and 4 p.m. 

THE REYNOLDS MOBILE aluminum 
recycling unit will be collecting beverage 
cans throughout November on Tuesdays 
and Thursdays at the Tallahassee Mall. 
Re>nolds pays S.17 per pound for cans 
and other all-ahiniinum items. 

THE FSL FXYING CLUB will meet 
tonight at "" JO in Room 118 Bellamy. 
Further information on the newly-formed 
dub is available from Bob Rivera at 
M4-6167. 

THE LPO COL NCIL will meet tonight at 
9 in Room 346 Union to discuss security for 
Harrv- C^apin. 

Sl\^ t-.NTS REreATTNG a course in 
lihich they made a *D' or F' must fill out 
an orange repeat card with Linda Bodiford 
in the FSU Registrar s Office. The card 
must be submitted before Nov. 15 in order 
for the new grade to replace the oW. 

THE PEOPLE FOR RATIONAL 
Marijuana Laws and a Linle Justice will 
hold an organi/aiiona! meetuig tonight at 
"iJO in Rtx>m 34^ In ion. 

AN LMMORTAUTl WORKSHOP 



THE ROSSUIf CLUB will have an 
Organizational meeting today at b p.m. in 
Room 252 Union. 

FSU*S PROGRAM IN Medical Sciences 
is sponsoring a pre-dental advisory 
meeting this afternoon at 5 i» Room 232 
Conradi. 

A cmiREN's wamns confer. 

ENCE. to explore issues and view points of 
children's needs, rights and privileges, will 
be held over two days beginning today at 
the Trinity United Melhodisi Church. The 
conference, co-sponsored by FSL's 
Department of Home and Family Life and 
the Florida Endowment for the 
Humanities, is open to anyone interested 
in psychology, child development and 
family relations. Registration will be held 
this morning from 9 to 10 at the church, 
and a S5 registration fee will be charged. 

CORRECTION: A storv in yesterday s 
Flambeau incorrectly identified the amount 
of money FSU receives under the STAR 
program as S300 miUion. Aaually. FSU 
gets S300.000. 

!■ Brief prnttcy : Tbe Flambeau in Brief 
of limifed space, docs not print 



inTTh-iiiJdi 



Rm. 314 Univefsiijy 

644-5744 

9 ajD. to 3 p.m. 






will be 
and evening events ttte same 
Only one notice will be nm of eacti 



»t FSU Box 'J or de4iv»red to Am 

office at 2ft4 N Moodward Ave by 1 p m Hie 
itwy are due ta mn. Aa natices stioukt inctude 
place, cast, if any, and a cvr^ac ntjf^.fc»er for 
items are 9ii(b|Cct to stanoara eaiting. 



be held tonight at 8 at the Taproot ^631 W. 
Tennessee. 

FEDER.4L PLACEMENT and federal 
recruiters will be the subject of a sp>eech by 
Stanle> Leate at 5 p.m. today in Room 240 
Union. Leate s^ili be speakmg to a meeting 
of ACfA I AF 

TUL 5llDL.\T A0V1SORY COMMir. 




Weather will be generally fair and mild 
through Friday with no rain in the forecast. 
Low s w ill be in the 50s today, with highs in 
the mid to upper 70s. 




BOOK 
SAU 

wommomu sroci owt 

ALL USED BOOKS REDUCED 
ONI GMNIP NBV MOKS HMCED 

CHINESE 

FIRE '"-^^ r^V 
SALE 

CLEAN US OUT' ' " * 

Jt% OfV IMM OCHMB 31 
30% OFF nmU NOVEMKI 4 
40% OFF THRU NOVEMBER 8 

st% Off mm NOVfMitt u 

\CuBar% e 





monroeati 



DISCO NIGHT 



O 
■n 
■n 

O 



i. f^f^^ NIGHT on Saturday, the 4th of 

SfclnSlSThfS;^- »^ "^"^*"g- There'll be a DJ with hoors o' 
ww^anowwi be giving awey doofprizes donated by local merchants, an 

dancers in a series of dance contests 
Sr?5SJS2^,V*^ " '"^ °* «^ and ada«SK.n 

COMMUNICATIONS 



IS 




FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Thursday. November 2. 1978 




INNER^ 



ODDS CHAtT: tf Oa. It. 1971 



M PEMTEM 

ST AUGUSTMi. HA 

DfllU TIIIMa 
MARY JEAN aOIWAN 




WIUMM FAifN 

iACKSONVUf . KA 

eOMTAIICC 



HA 

mil. TAUT 



BERTIIA 

mioiiwciuo. nx 

OEIOfUM FEAM 



EVELYN KOUAMK 

iACKSCMVHXf FL* 

$1^1 WINNERS 



UMM J. ttLm 

^^^^^^^^^ W ^WW^^^B^B V 

MUMIK KAOi HA. VAUK3STA. CA 

STEVE H WILEY JUOfTN C. FOSTER 





WO. Of 


OOOS K30 
CM i10« 


OSMWt 


0S0$ K30 


con 00 


a 


t«9 Iff TO t 


at 140 TO 1 


iron TO ' 


1 001 00 


S3 


•1 no TO 1 






200 00 


»t 


«« !«03 TO : 


m.m 


414 


tO.IM TO 1 


1 M3 TO 1 


341 TO 1 




AM 


4.SM TO t 


)M TO 1 


an TO 1 




MM 


), 113 TO 1 


l>» to 1 


70 TO I 




fjm 


MK) 1 


J01O T 


as io 1 


1 00 


«4 234 


43 TO » 


• fO 1 


J TO 1 


TOTAi 


no MO 


y9 TO ' 


4 TO 1 


JVj TO 1 





m4 Id ww ia Bp»» ■<i>4rt> f— iil » . ' 



OOANTfTY MGHTS 



THMFH MAID 

SUGAR 



PRICiS OOOD 
THURS. • WIO., 

MovnwMKa-t 

IM. NO. I aiMMM 

POTATOES 



W-D BRAND USOA OKNCI 

BONELESS 

CHUCK 
ROAST 




SAVE 
60V 



LB. 



10 



88 



USOA INSPiCTED 
W-DMMII»nMI 



HARVEST FRESH 

BROCCOU 




GROUND 
BEEF 



W D BRAND USDA CHOICE 

SIRLOl 
STEAK 



IN THE 
5 OR 10 LB. 
HANM PAK 

LB. 




■ID DILKIOUS 



EAsnRN -i e iiBsi 

lAPPLES IO'- I 



$ 



HARVIST rtiSH 



GREEN 

CABBAGE .. 



IT 



SAVE 40^1 



W-D BRAND USOA CHOICE 

BONELESS FULL-CUT 

OUN 
TEAK 

$22! 

SAVE 30s. 



UnM 1 wMi i7.se mr i 



•OX 



RLUi BAY LIGHT CHUNK 

TUNA 



SUMRBRAND 

la CREAM 

Be 



SUMRBRANO 

WMPTOPHNG 

C 



W-0 BRAND NOT OR MHO 

WHOLE HOG 
SAUSAGE 

I USOA GRADE 'A' QUICK FROZEN 
|W4> BRAND REGULAR 

BROADBREASTED 
TURKEYS 



CANS 

UmlH « wMfc t7.30 or i 



BUSCH BEER 

12 OZ. ^128 

QANS six 

pack 



MIX OR MATCH! 



69 



FRANKS 



COHAGE CHEESE 

2r$"j09 

SUMRBRAND GRADE 'A' 

URGE EGGS 



r " 

' USDA GRADE A FRESH 
COUNTRY STYLE 

CUT UP 


M i IMI 1 1 









W-D BRAND BEEF OR MEAT 



12-ox. 
PKG. 



a. FRESH PORK LOIN PACKAGE 




8 m. 
5 in. 
Si. 



CB«TtR 

CHOPS 



ROAST 

SPUT ro« 




SLICE 
DLOGN 



it 



1 



:?r.|: 

.4,../ 



1 ft I" 




f I 




( - * 





K « INFORMED mER.5L 'A^l SLTJlHi^;& ' 

tET OUT AND VOTE '^sSSt^^^^^F-ziJ^r'i w 
UD ENJOT AN ELECTION ^^:=s:S:-^ 

mOHT SUPPEA FAOM PUMJI o^onxThg^cnoce'c Bee/ 

^ FROM OUB DEU~ - im -an -v-r- n mW l 

^IHUiCIOIJS OBCltEM DINNER lYoiirsf ^ tj^»* 

' Ln^^^WB i if Beef Bologna .^^^^Twr 49' Sw^« ^ -■ n m iTi ■■ hI i ■■ i n'jTiwt 

Dwfcli Apple W« r -"^^ i[ T ITi ■ . 

R^oc • : •••• Z.- . ■ > r . • 

[ X ^rie«i CAMckea . \Z 

y ^^'^-^^^^jtlSISM— I RibSlMk 

^^^^^^^fi^^ U-SJlLiLCh«i»lfc^*fc»|^»#^ 

- -^'!'?5^5EiBH^H^^. - ."('HI 

Turkey FrMks _ i;^ 99 | ^^^8^?55^^B --^-Slt^i^ i™i - 59^ | 

Morgorwie . U ^ p ^p»Ftf" 

SowrCreowi 49" I ^E^^S^^^ S^^iJ* 

IT I m/mmm T ^ iJia!^, ; . I " - • f ^ ^ ^ 

^ -3 * & Half _ i 8^ ' ^r^i /'^^l 

bi« 2:^2^:::^^ - , r"^^^^ --J 

tiM riglit to imit f"*^ '^^-^ wiii.A-i«i«.o. 

L IJ-liUI r ?Kor„ Cheese C M« I ' " 

B*g Eye Swia *»j i\m ^ma^» ^ > j 



***** ■■■■■^ OWMB srwi 






Breyer's 



$ 1 69 



FOOD 
STAMPS! 





F L AM B E A U fhuntmr. Novefnber 2. 1978 / 9 



★ ★★ 



U.S. 
FRENCH 



59 



Great For Sondwiches Plom Or 
Topped With Poppy Or Sesame Seeds 

KoisOT Rolls 

Mod* From DoUciow* G«l(l*n Vcll«w Coke. 

Garnished With Sliced AlrnotMift, 

Rum Ring Cake 7^:*- 89* 

A Short. Ftoky Pio Crust Filled With Zesty Lemon Fitttno And 
Topped With A Fluffy Meringue, 8-Inch 

iMmomMmHn^mPim Xl^^V^ 

( Available In FuH-Servic* 8crft«ri«« Only) 

Filled With Apricot Gornished With Butter Sfr#VMl 
And Glazed With Creamy Icing I6-O1. 

Apricot Coffee Cake 99* 

Prices On Abeve Items Effective Thwr*., Fri. & Sat Only— 
NeveMiber2,3,4, 197t. 

HRST OF THE WfM SPEaAL 

Pe t ci o w*. Fre^-Boked 

Sugar Cookies o2l79* 

Price On Above Item Effective Men., Tmos., Wed. Only— 



. P 





^1 bag 1 



November 6. 7, 8, 1978. 



From Our Grocery Dept. 





us Fon<v Cri*p JuK , Appl-' R<»d O' 

Coiden Delicious 3 t9* 

' The Natural Snotfii CoMerma Ta«ty 

R#«l Crapes Z 49* 

Serve W.tSCK <ouce"lHe White ' IWertern 

Caulif louver SS 7#* 

Perfect For SaladN (M?dnjm Sii4^ 

Tasty Tomotoes C 39* 

Bake Fry or Boil Fre*h Tender 

Zucchini Squash IT 29* 

SIko and Fry These n«*mp Purple 

Proeh ipppl ni 19* 

For Your Ceehing Need* U.S. iri Yelew 

Cooking Onions 3 49* 

For Your Salads and Dips Flondo 

Fresh Avocados 3 f» *1 

For Your Garnish Needs. Colifornio 

Juicy Lemons C %9* 

Top Your SoiadUfMiYs 



35-«z 
•iie 



Serve With Ham, Mett's 

Apple Sauce 

Plain, Meat Or Mushroom, Ragu 

Spaghetti Sauce "J* M^' 

Greot Over S«lod, Kraft 

Itdion Dressing ^* 67« 

Beef , Shrimp Or Chicken 

Cup-O-Noodfes 'i.r 57' 

Serve With Poncakes, GoMen Griddle 

Syrup '£r 

Kraft Dinner 

Macaroni & Cheese.... '.*bU- 7V 

Ronco Vermicelli Or 

Thin spaghetti '2^.' 41^ 

Great In fioking, Hershey 

Mini Chips 'ij 

Folger's Mountain Grown 

Flaked Coffee... ^2" 

25c Off Label, Cold Water 

All Detergent *Sr; ^2^^ 

Cold Water Wash 

Woolite Liquid '2.r ^2*' 

Gob 

Dinner Napkins 57^ 

Stoyfree 

Maxi Pods 'iy 99^ 

Glad 

Sandwich Bags , 55* 



★I 

87* ★ 



lonu* 

My 1 1 



★ ★★ 



>R SALADS OR SANDWICHES 

Mayonnaise 

32-oz. jar 

f%g< 



^ ?•« 

Moke t is Ms e p lont Feeding Safe and Bosy 
(20 Spikes per package) with Jobe's 

No If replant Spikes., ffi S9* 



r 



LlMit 1 PiMse. With Othsr Purchases of S5 
or More. Excluding All Tobacco Itms 




From Our Con^y Dept. 



Peter Poul 

Almond Joy JiJ 87' 

Ta^ty Switzer's 

Licorice 'SHi* 67* 

Great For Parties Delicious 

Kraft Buttermints Iti 61' 

Brach's 

Lemon Drops 

T«styBroch'ft 

Spicettes 

Brach's 

Sour Lemon JelHes . ...... 'Si' 47« 



9.0I 
til* 

1*^1 
fit* 




Orang 
Juice 

half gal. 

89 



nJj 



47^ 
47* 



^^^^ 



Ihg, PiQce/or Ffbzen Foods 



Assorted Banquet 

Cookin' Bag Entrees.... ^ 32* 

Blackberry Or Buttermilk, Aunt Jemima 

Pancake Mix 76' 

Great With French Fries, Steok-Umm 

Sandwich Steaks ^2*** 

Ore-Ida County Style (Pely-Bog) 



Dinner Fries... U ^1 



49 



SAVE V8c (5c Oi 
ASSORTED, CALYPS< 

Facial 




8c (5C OFF LABEL) WHITE^ 
CALYPSO OR PRINT SCOHIES 



al Tissue 

200-«;t. bo« 



^^^^^ (^^^yM 



SAVE 17c, Green Giont Whole Or Sliced 

Mushrooms 

SAVE 1 Oc Green Giant Kitchen Sliced 

Green Beans 

SAVE 1 c, Chef Boy-Ar-Dee Mini Ravioli Or 

Roller Coasters ...... 

SAVE 40c, Tender Leaf 

Tea Bags 

Delicious Sealtest 

Drumstick Cones ... 

SAVE 10c, Pampers 

Toddler Diapers 

SAVE 9c, White. Asserted Or Print, Soft-Weve 

Batliroom Tissue ... 



16-oz 
con 

IS-o>. 
con 




f\ (f^'k lb 


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Arts/ ea Hires 

■■^■■■ ■■■ ■ ■■Miii^MMMi-iiiiiii Biiiiii i iiiiriiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiriiim in rii 'i' i r 

The local drive to end world hunger 



by susan rouse 

flambeau wrifer 

Remember seeing the swollen bellies of Biafrian 
children on (he news, vague reports of starvation in the 
Sudan and northwest Africa? The only unique aspect of 
these events is their having gained world attention. 
Starvation is neither new nor unusual. Estimates are that 
15 20 million peopk die yearly from starvatioa and 
malnutrition. 

Or^anizatons abound that seek to alleviate hunger 
and/ or its causes: overpopulation and unequal and unfair 
distribution of the world's resources. One recently formed 
organization which se'sks to end hunger is The Hunger 
Project. 

"The thrust of The Hunger Project is to educate and 
re-educate people about hunger. We will create a concept 
within the individual to end world hunger," says local 
Hunger Project committee member, Jimmy Dennard. 

The Hunger Project is an international organization 
founded by Werner Erhard, who is also the founder and 
chief advocate of EST. The Hunger Project's stated goal is 
to end hunger and starvation on a global scale within 19 
years. Among the members of the national council are 
Dick Gregory and Buckminister Fuller. 

Since its inception, individual Hunger Project 
committees have sprung up nationally. They, like the 
Tallahassee committee, emphasize education. 

The Tallahassee chapter of the Hunger Project was 
initiated about one year ago by Corrine Sharpe, a graduate 
of FSU in social welfare. Her involvement began with a 
trip to Ft. Lauderdale and contact with the Miami chapter. 
'*Since her return," according to Dennard, "around 500 
people in Tallahassee have enrolled. We set up a booth at 
Springtime Tallahassee and it has grown from there." 

Upon enrolling, which involves filling out a mail reply 
card, the individual is asked to make a "personal 
commitment" to end hunger in the world. This specifically 

Beverly Sills ' 
first, last visit 

by nature johmton 



entails the choices either to fast one day a month, enroll 
other members, donate money, or settle on some sort of 
individually tailored program. The suggested course of 
action includes writing to congressmen and other officials 
urging action on the hunger program. 

Dennard and fellow committee members give 
presentations to enlist interested people. He is currently 
talking to sororities and fraternities on the Florida State 
ennpus, but organizations in the wider Tallahassee 
community have also been successfully contacted. 

The search for members extends into the political realm. 
Several state and municipal proclamations have been 
issued in support of the committee. Tallahassee area 
congressman, Don Fuqua. has become the first member of 
the national legislative body from this state to endorse The 
Hunger Project. Support for the Project was introduced 
into the Congressional Record. And in conjuction with the 
Harry Chapin benefit concert Sunday, Reubin Askew has 
declared November Hunger Month in Florida. 

The Hunger Project's plans to redistribute food are not 
particularly firm or specific at this point. Despite this, 
Dennard feels that the 19-year goal is realistic. "Within 
the next two to three years specific plans will begin to take 
shape." The direction the program will take depends on its 
populist response. The national organization Uterature 
does stress self-reliance in Third World nations. 

Dennard sees The Hunger Project as an organization 
that will enhance the efforts of existing organizatioos such 
as CARE and UNESCO. "They haven't been soocessfii] — 
we will be," he said. 

"Efforts to educate the people in Tallahassee are going 
on all the time. We've contacted many people . but there 
are many more. We want to enroll 200.000 in the 
Tallahassee area." 

Interested individuals can call 877-4763. A booth for the 
Hunger Profect wiU be set up at the Harry ChafHn omcert. 



U you were to ask ' yoar typical 
man-on-the-street to name a iunoas 

American opera star in ten seconds 
probably the first, and quite potsHily the 
only, name he would come up with woaM 
be Beverly Sills, known to her Uau as 
"Bubbles." 

Miss Sills may be the most wid^-kaown 
opera performer in the U^., not onl^ 
because she has M no major rale 
unturned in her career, but also because of 
her work in television. She received an 
Emmy for her 1975 "Profile in Music" 
produced by England's BBC, and recently 
co-starred with Carol Burnett in the 
special, "Sills and Burnett at the Met." 

The FSU Artist's Series opened last 

^t with a peffonnaace by ftfiss Sins. ^ 
chose mostly operatic selections from 
Handel. Mocart, losnm, among otIiefB, 
with a few non -opera art songs. 

Miss Sills is a coloratnfa performei, 
which is to say that she does the most 
difficult and demanding of the opera 
repertory. She has done evety role 
available to her, amoonting to over 
seventy. 

Speaking to a small group of reporters on 
Wednesday. Miss Sills said her great 
American dream of becoming an opera star 
without dependence upon the Metnipolitaa 
Opera in New York has been 




AMERICAN 
CANCER SOCIETY t« 

This space contrdxned by the publisher 



Beverly Sills 



accompfished. Finally makmg her Med 
debut in 1975 did little to further her 
, career, but she admitted it was personally 

satisfying. 

* 'There is no rumor about my 
retirement." she said, adding that she has 
already produced her last albmn. "In 1960 
i win be 51 , and I always said I woidd letiie 
at age 50." Hot one for die roddag chair 
set, ho»^er, Miss^ Syis wifl become 
co-director of the lieilr York City (Opera in 
1961. 

Un(9 then, she has a foil schedule, whidi 
includes vigoroiis touring comnutments. 
Johnny Carson so enjoyed her as a .recent 
substitute for him on the 'Tonight Show" 
that he has invited her hm± for March. She 
hosts a talk sliow m New York and serves 
as the Natioiia] Chaormaa of the Mother's 
March OB 1^ defocts. Match of Dimes. 

Last night's perfonnaace was Beverly 

Sills* first and last visit to TaOahasaee as an 
opera singer. 

See FHday*s Flambemi for a leview of 
Beverly SiBs* Wednesday peiformance. 



Circle seeking people 

I Each fall the Comparative Literature Circle, imm u 
I further the interests of faculty, community and studcijti* 
I the comparative approach to literature and fUa, tttt^ 
I an invitation for new members. While it seeks aenb^ 
[from the humanities departments, the Circle wtkoai, 

and encourages members from the entiie iatcflectn 

community. 

The Cffcle's activities run from hosting speafcm to 

sponsoring campus symposia and an ammal confbeacv OB 
I literature and film. 

There will be a general meeting of the membership 

today at 3:30 in Room 1 28 Diffenbau^ to wekone Hv 

members, receive nominations for the advisory board aid 

to discuss topics and spetkcn for the 1960 coofeieiKt 



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12 Thursday^ November 2 1 978 FLORIDA FLAMBEA 



Sports 



Seminoles 



quickness 



by Sidney bedingfield 

flambMu ftports MNtor 

If you can't overpower 'em then you better be able to 

outsmart 'em. 

That may be the best way to describe Joe Williams* 
coaching philosophy. The first-year basketball coach at 
FSU inherits a team severely depleated by graduation — 
especially along the backline, but Williams finds little 
reason for pessimism. 

"I look at it as a challenge," Williams said of his 
rebuilding task. "Besides, these players are much further 
along than my first year at any of the places I've coached 
before. At every other place I had to start from scratch." 

But Williams will be starting from scratch at FSU where 
rebounding is concerned. With the graduation of Harry 
Davis and David Thompson, and the academic ineligibility 
of Kris Anderson, the Seminoles have only Murray Brown 
and Hank Mann returning to the back line. That means 
sophomore James Bozeman and junior college transfer Ed 
Chapman need to come through with solid performances if 
FSU is to be successful. 

"There are a lot of guys jockeying for those inside 
positions," Williams said. "Chapman has good quickness 
and excellent statistics from the wing position, and Hank 
Mann and James Bozeman have been working at the high 
post." 

Chapman also backs up Mickey Dillard at guard, 
according to Williams, and Bozeman and Mann play some 
at the low post behind Brown. But none of the trio have 
shot well so far in practice, though Williams thinks this is 
only normal. 

"Mann has been taking some bad shots and Bozeman 
just needs to loosen up more," Williams said, "but once^ 
they learn the offense a Uttle better then the shooting will 
improve." 

The bright spots for Williams are the two returning 
guards — Tony Jackson and Mickey Dillard, who Williams 
says are even quicker than he thought. They will be the 
main cogs in FSU's running game, and Williams believes 
they will have to be near flawless ball handlers. 



I 




PARTS 
SttH^ent Discounti 
208 North Aciacm 
224-7161 





T 


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Experience 
this season 
with fashions 
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The general 
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8 
1 



Ed Chapman 

. . . JC transfer working at wing position 

'When you run, the nature of the game causes you to 
make mistakes," Williams said. '*But because we can't 
rebound well we need to commit as few turnovers as 

turn to BASKinALL pmf ^ 



etc 



THE FLORIDA 
UNIVERSITY SC 

MUSIC 



presents 

THE UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 
PHILLIP SPURGEON, Conductor GERARDO 
RiBIERO, Violin 

PROGRAM SIBELIUS: Violin Concerto/SAPP: 
The Double Image/ELGAR: Enigma VariatkinB 

SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 4, 1978 - 
8:15 p.m. - RUBY DIAMOND AUDITORIUM 

Tickets available now at the Central Ticket Offk:e 
in the University Unkm BuMing and at the Ruby 
Diamond Box OfRoe on the evening of the 
fMrfonmanoe only. 

FSU STUDENTS: ' Free with validated 
ID/ADULTS: $3.50 (general admission) 
STUDENTS AND SENIOR CITIZENS: $1.75 



HENRY'S 
MEATS 



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1978 



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Thursday is 
, LADIES' NIGHT: Free Admission 
and Free Draft till 1 1 p.m. 
for all Ladies. 

TOMUT'S 



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Now comes Miller time 




r 



c 1978 Milter Bivwiing Co . Mdwaukee Wis 




Classified Ads 




omen 
hip i 



by colli 



Althoiigh their 
•mlaole tennis tcan 
,ae«oeof tbe impfovcm^ 

ir. 

WMk struggling to a 
the I«dy nettci 
jfidcr the dtewJtioii of ei 
I oclaww and arc now stai 
But Lockrpw is not sui 
An FSU law stmlait and 
I the waitf** Impiwenicnt 
this ytm^* eariy succt 
recruiting a»d a loild coi 
Bat periulpi part of th< 
Lodao«r*t koowiedfe an< 
four-year letter niaa at 
Lodoow wm an AO-Amerij 
in eflbctive coacfaiaf phi 
from bis players. 

WiMr ¥mk stand-out 
of Lockiow't ontalaiiding 
ranked freshman wasted 
one paaillaB<<Mtlii learn, 
a vital role, acoordtng t 
recruitneat as *'a gambl 
adiSticNi of two wA-ons. 
was **a pleMant surprise 
Adding stabUity and 
veteiaaa laalie Ahbch a 
Maqi^ Beck in the tMrd s 
"The lei^ership of C 
games psychologicany an 
"He is the whole re a 
Abtsch. "He oommunicat 
fair." 

Obviously, Lockrow's ir 
the lady netters' success, 
work on the part of his sq 
Semtuoles put in hours 
weekly program are e 
climbing, drills and match 

The women will discove 
when they face national 
Saturday. The traditionally 
the Tally Gym courts at 9 
"will show us how far we 
a top 20 ranking may no t 
ranking has suddenly be<. 

LADIES' NITE 
Free Admission 
Free draft till 1 1 for 
all Ladies. 



T0UM7 



F 
R 

I 



Ml 

feotwii 



atthi 

Do 



12:00 to 



FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Thursdav November 2 ^ 978 ' 15 




omen's tennis? Lockrow cracks the 
whip in search of top twenty spot 



by colton Imcktoy 



Although their season is but a month old, the Lady 
Ntminolc tennis team's unblemished record is tangible 
idenceof the improvement that has transpired since last 

.car. 

While struggling to a mediocre 8-10 finish in the 1977-78 
:ampaign. the lady netters have turned it around this year 
under the direction of energetic second-year coach Park 
Lockrow and are now standing 5-0, 

But Lockrow is not surprised at the rapid turn around. 
An FSU law student and part-time coach, Lockrow feels 
the marked improvement was "inevitable" and believes 
this year s early success can be attributed to good 
recruiting and a solid conditioning program. 

But perhaps part of the team's success can be traced to 
Lodrow's knowledge and experience as a player. As a 
four vear letterman at the University of Tennessee, 
Lockrow was an All-American tennis player and developed 
an effective coaching philosophy aimed at getting the most 
from his players. 

Winter Park stand-out Laurie Meuller is representative 
of Lockrow 's outstanding recruitment drive. The nationally 
ranked freshman wasted no time in winning the number 
oneposition on the team. Also, Penne Nieporte has played 
a vital role, according to Lockrow, who described her 
'ccruitment as "a gamble which turned out great." The 
addition of two walk-ons, Chetyl Cordes and GiGi Boesch, 
was "a pleasant surprise." 

Adding stability and experience to the squad are 
veterans Leslee Abisch at the mmber two po^M, and 
Mary Beck in the third spot. 

"The leadership of Coach Lockrow has improved our 
games psychologically and physically," Beck said. 

"He is the whole reason for our success," added 
Abisch. "He communicates real well with us, and he is 
fair." 

Obviously, Lockrow's influence has been a key factor in 
the lady netters* success. However, dedication and hard 
work on the part of his squad cannot be over-looked. The 
Seminoles put in hours of work daily. Included in their 
weekly program are endurance nt^, stadium slep- 
ciimbing, drills and match play. 

The women will dtsooi^ If tlieir^iaid work has paid off 
when they face nationalty ranked Rollins College on 
Saturday. The traditionally tough Rollins squad will invade 
^ Tally Gym comts at 9 a.m. and, according to Lockrow, 
will show us how fiur we have to go." Lockrow's hope for 
I top 20 ranking may no longer be a dream — a national 
ranking has suddenly boione an attainable goal. 



LADIES' NITE 
Free Admission 

Free draft tW 11 for 
all Ladles. 



at 



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Leslee Abisch 



photo by Jonathan bumetto 



Invite the bunch ... 
Mix m gnmt big tuckmt fulit^ 

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Recipe 

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3 quarts 7 UP 
6 01. ffMh l«mon jmce 
One 6-oi.'tS»h froaen orange luice 
One 6-oz. can frozen lemonade 

Chin mgrmfimu. Mw m bucket, 
adtffng 7UPI»st. Add 9 f»¥¥ (finps 

food coloring (optional) and stir 
lightly Add ice. orange, lemon 
slices Looks and tastes great! 



You know it's got to be good. . when it's made with 




SOimCMI COMTORT COfVORATHM. 00 PROOF IMWEUR. ST LOUtS. MO 63132 



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Regional and 
National Competition 

PLUS 

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PRIZES!!! 

Loc^ Competition 

Coining bate: Nov. 10-12 

FSU INTRAMURAL F£LDS 

1. Volley Ball 
Z 8B0 Relay 

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5. Team Frisbee 

6. Tug-of-War 

Eligibility: 

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NO ATHLETIC SCHOLARSHIP 
STUDENTS ALLOWED 
FIRST 100 TEAMS TO REGISTER 



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How To Enter: 1?^^ 

/. Bud Booth in the Union 
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Z F.S.U. kitraniwal Office 
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3. ChmKMfeth Distributors: 

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If s coning to 

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t • • 



YTONA BEACH "SPRING BREAK" 




Gran 



by 



Tbe Leon ( 
investigatton ot 

wbkii w FSli 
f^Hlliassee man 
j^it week. Shtr 
periOR Wayne S 
••I think the 
qoestMS raised 
hivestigation to h 
it." Smith said, 
released untU t 
fiiidiiigs.'* 



Serving Th^^ 



a 



by sid 

flam 

Hard feelings h 
Eifis NatioBal 
Uahfersity over 
university's athlet 
one estiiBate pu 
September. 

EDIs Naticmai 
controlled by the 
until FSU decided 
Bamett Bank, 
afficials at Ellis 
wondering what 

•Yes. it did 
National Vice-Prt 
have no idea whv 
tobert) McOoud 
to find out.*' 

Although FSl 
said the avera^ 
checking accoun 
around $80,000. a 
move it may have 
assistant comptro 
ed the figure to b 

Bamett Preside 
ht wasn't sure 
account, but he 
Bernard Sliger a 
•tying his bank 
iccounts because 
hind tit as far as 

"I'm not ashu 
Humphress said 
rescue of the 
sponsoring the 
three local 
hamburger chain 
mmute. And we 



Grand juiy will consider Springer case soon 



by danni vogt 

auistMit iMwt editor 

The Leon County Sheriffs Department 
tfivestigation of a shooting last week in 
which an FSU police officer killed a 
Tallahassee man shoiikl be concluded early 
next week. Sheriffs Department Spokes- 
person Wayne Smith said yesterday. 

"I think there's pti^^alily enoiigli 
questions raised in the course of the 
investigation to have a grand jury look into 
it." Smith said, adding, "Nothiog wfil be 
released until the grand jury makes its 
findh^s.*' 



The grand jury probably wUl cowider Oe 
case in its Nov. 14 aessioa. said assistant 
state attorney Warten Goodwin. 

Sgt. Troy Springer, a nine-year veteran of 
the FSU police force, that and klied postal 
worker WUlie SaoMerry at 11:45 t.m. on 
Oct. 25 in the parking lot of Frisch's 
restaurant. 

Police said Springer had stopped 
Saulsberry for a loutine traffic vioUtion 
shortly before the ^looting occurred. 
According to witnesses, a gun fell from 
Saulsberry*s lap when he was pulled dead 
from his car. 



None of the wilwesses wcce certain if 
Saulsberry. who knew Springer before the 
incident, had pulled a gun on Springer 
before the shooting. The Sheriffs 
Department could not release information 
mi this point pending the grand jury 



The Lc«M County gmd 
tile find ing s of its neat 
The grand jury wffl 
cases in addition to the 




^ OB Nov. 16. 
several otiier 



**We still have a few people left to 
interview, but we expect to comf^e that by 
e«1y next week, pos«bly Monday.** Smith 
said. He added it was routine in matters like 
this to interview witnesses and other people 
who think they know something about the 
case. 



Florida 



Friday 

November 3, 1978 




Serving Tallahassee for 66 years 



Decision to transfer FSU 
athletic funds a surprise 



by siciney bedingf i«lcl 

fftamfeMu sporH tdifor 

Hard feelings have surfaced between the 
Blis National Bmik and Florida State 
University over the removal of the 
university's athletk checking account which 
one estimate put at $300,00D in eariy 
September. 

Ellis Nationid Bank held the account, 
contrdled by the FSU comptroller's ciRce, 
until FSU decided to sh^ the account to tiie 
Bamett Bank, a move that surprised 
officials at ElUs National luad left them 
wondering what happened. 

"Yes, it did surprise us," said Ellis 
National Vice-President Jim Mathis. '^We 
have no idea why it was moved (Preddent 
Robert) McCloud is talking to people at FSU 
to find out." 

Although FSU comptn^r Scott Kent 
said the average size of the athletic 
chedung account during 1977-78 was 
around $80,000, and that at the time of the 
move it may have been as high as $150,000, 
assistant comptroller Ed Gonzalez estimat- 
ed the figure to be closer to $300,000. 

Bamett President Tom Humphress said 
he wasn't sure when his bank got the 
sccount, but he wrote FSU President 
Bernard Sliger a letter several months ago 
saying his bank would appreciate any FSU 
accounts because Bamett was ** sucking 
hind tit as far as dollars were concerned." 

*Tm not ashamed we got the account," 
Humphress said. "Last year we came to the 
rescue of the Athletic Department by 
sponsoring the Bobby Bowden Show on 
three local television stations after a 
hamburger chain pulled out at the last 
nunute. And we agreed to handle their 



BankAmericard account with no service 
charge. It may be a case of I'll scratch your ^ 
back if you'll scratch mine. In any case, 
somebody finally agreed to give us an 
account." 

Dr. Sliger said he personally has nothing 
to do with deciding where the bank accounts 
go and knew nothing about this particular 
movement when it occured. But Sliger did 
say he had discussed the matter later with 
ViOe-President of Acadmic Affairs B. J. 
Hodge and asked him to review the process . 

FSU comptroller Scott Kent vehemently 
demed that factors were involved in the 
checking account move other than the 
search for a more efficient handling of the 
university's numey, or that the decision to 
change banks originated anywhere in the 
University other than his office. 

"The move was initiatod from the 
comptroller's office after conducting an 
analysts of our banking practices," Kent 
said, "and die analysis said a change was 
advisable." 

Kent said the primary criteria for moving 
an account is the location of the bank, 
followed by the services the hmik offers. 

* * Bamett Bank is doaer and larger, ' ' Kent 
said, "and we have another account — 
agencies and actWities — already in Bamett 
BaiA. For administration efficiency, we can 
fore better with Uie funds together and 
closer to us." 

Mathis, expressing surprise at the move, 
said Ellis National President Robert 
McOood was probably one of the biggest 
supporters of FSU athletics In town, and 
"hasn't mi^ed a game in three years." 
Mathis also said the bank was invoh^ whh 
Golden Chiefs, nn exctnslve booater 




Scott Kent 



.FSU comptroKer 



organization for supporters who contribute 
heavily to the FSU athletic program. 

But McCloud refused to comment except 
to acknowledge he was snrprised at the 

transfer. 

Kent, however, said that support of the 
university played no part m the decision to 
chaifge banks or to conduct the analysis that 
he said led to the switch. 

"You can't be blind to that (university 
support), ' ' Kent said, ' *but the comptroller's 
office can not ran its business like that." 

Kent also said tlie analyses of Its banking 
practices by the university are neither 
freqnent nor regular, with possibly 
three having been done in the last three 
years. "Maybe I was stupid or naive, but I 
did this based on our professional stody — 
and it's become clear that theie Me oter 



There is a ^ght poislt^ity. OoMlwbi 
said, that the grand jury wiD not 
the case untB Its Dec. 3 



The IS mem be rs of llie grand jury are 
selected at random from 100 regi^ered 
voters who are residents of Leon Coo^ 
and chosen for jury duty. They serve for sis 
moirths. 



Revision would 
hike BOR power 
in poKcy matters 



by dennit mulquMn 

flambMu staff writtr 

The Florida Cabinet is not often referred 
to as the state Board of Education. But it is 
and revision 8 of the Florida Cons^utioj 
proposes to change that. 

If the revision is approved by voters on 
Nov. 7. the Cabinet role as the state Board 
of Education would be abolished, to be 
replaced by nine i^pointoes of the 

governor. 

Under the terms of the revision, the 
newly created state Board of Education 
would have the power to coordinate the 

state system of public education. The state 
Board of Education's power over the State 
University System would be limited by ; 
clause which would vest in the Board o 
Regents the ultimate power to manage thi 
SUS in regards to educational policy 
matters. 



Under the current setup, the Cabinet, ii 
its role as state Board of Education, ha 
veto power over any Board of Regent 

decision. 

The revision states that the functioning o 
the new Board of Education shall not b> 
"inconsistent with the provisions of Article 
IX, Section 7," which says that the Board ol 
Regents "shall operate, regulate, control, 
and be fully responsible for the 
management of the State University 
System, subject to the overall coordinative 
responsibilities of the state Board of 
Education and subject to general law, 
except on matters relating exclusively to the 
educational policy Gi the State Universtty 
System." 

Commissioner of Education Ralph 
Turlington is strongly opposed to the 

measure. 

"The State University System and the 
Board of Regents. . .would gain 
oonstitirtionid supremacy on matters of 
education policy, placing it above all other 
elements of public education, above the 
legislature, and above the law," Turiiagton 
said. 

According to Turhngtoii, the Ust 14 
words, "except on matters relating 
exclusively to educational policy," mean 
that the BOR "would not be subject to 
policy established by the Florida legislature 
or to f^enlatma of the state Board of 



frnn to REVtSiOM. 



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Revisi 



E<lucatH>n." 
The IcgislatiJ 

process- 

If revision H 
could not withh< 
because it woohi 

•The state B 
which superced 
tfiterrelating th^ 
contended. 

Turlington's 
law was termed 
BOR Chancellor| 

"The propos" 
Kcgcnis would 
rejoined. "Fui 
legislature can 
may vMsh thrmi 

The BOR ch.i 
spelled out h\ n 
Florida statuft s 

lurlington 
»)iher scgmef 
misstatrnufit 
"explicitly statt 
overall ciH)rdinaf| 
Education ** 

"The nn»st siu| 
said, "is thai 1 
would have ec] 
interest." 

Gov Rtnibin 
function as tl 
"meaningless, 
proposal. Askew 
Board and the k{ 
foal say. 

"The Bo " 
you the legisiaiu 

Former Attornl 
the revision, sa 
appointed or ek < 

'The issue he] 



This space contnbutr. j 



5 WEEI 
WE 

diver: 

CAI 



4 



Revision from 



c^LORIDA FLAMBEAU Friday, November 3 1978 3 



Educatioii. 

The legislature funds the SUS in its annual budget 

process. 

If revision 8 passes. Turlington allied the legislature 
could not withhold money on matters of educatkma] poUcy 
because it would be unconstitutional. 

"The state Board of Education should have a u t ho r ity 
which s^>ercedes the Board of Regents on matters of 
interrelating the state education system," Turlington 
contended. 

Turlingtoo's assertion thirt the BOR would be above the 
law was termed **an absurd and hidimus c o n t en tion" by 
BOR Giancellor E.T. Y<»ic. 

"The proposed amendment clearly states that the 
Regents would be subject to the laws of the state/' Yoit 
rejoined. *Turthermore, it is idioadMlly clear that the 
legislature can exercise whatever control or direction it 
may wish through the appropriation process/* he said. 

The BOR chancellor said tbe function of the Board as 
spelled out by revision 8 Is essentially the same as present 
Florida statutes dictate. 

Turlington's allegation that the BOR wcwld be above all 
other segments of public education is an "incredible 
misstatement/* York maintained. The proposed revi^on 
"explicitly states thatthe Regents would be subject to the 
overall coordinative responsibilities of the state Board of 
Education/* 

"The most significant thing it would accomplish/* York 
said. **is that it provides for a Board of Education that 
would have education as its primary concern and 
interest.*' 

Gov. Reubin Askew said yesterday that the Cabinet's 
function as the state Board of Education is 
"meaningless/* and urged Floridians to vote for the 
proposal. Askew said in any. future conflicts between the 
Board and the legislature, the legislature would have the 
final say. 

"The Board may win a few battles, but I can assure 
you the legislature will win the war/' Askew commented. 

Former Attorney General Jim Kynes, primary author of 
the revision, said the issue is not whether there is an 
appointed or elected Board of Education. 

"The issue here is whether ue hnve an appointed 



OMCnSOCKTY % 

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bond or no f a: K\nes said. Revision ^ aui 

* 'give greater accessibility to education." Kyncs said. 

Among those opposed to the revision is the L niicd 
Faculty of Florida, the collective bargaining agent for 
univefiity faculty. ^ 

NeU Betten. former vice president of the state union, 
said the Board of Regents has enough power. 

**1 don't diiak it's in the best interest of the state to have 
the Board of Regents the last court of appeals on 
education," Betten said. 

The Florida Student Association is also against the 
t^mion. "If revision 8 passes, the BOR could make a rule 
to do anything/* O.C. Allen, vice president of the FSA. 
said. 

•*rm not saying they wffl,** Allen said, "but five to ten 
years from now, we don't know who is going to be on the 
Board. There might be some real turkeys (on the Board). ' 

Revision 8 will appear on the Nov. 7 ballot along with the 
other seven proposed revisions to the Florula constitution. 




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Flambeaa 



Revision 8 



decide at the poils next week, is the creation of a 
nine-member state board of education, appointed by the 
fovernof and confirmed by the Florida legislature. The 



rd fvonld be 



•L«ll»tltl|IUJI 



with the 



ally diaiged 



Addifloniny. revision 8 would constitutionally empower 
the Board of Regents to govern the State University 
System* Although the revision language is extremely 
vagoe, it ap p ears the lesott would be a split in ed u catioo , 
with Idadefgartea through twetfth gmle nd comnnrily 
c olleges aaawCTahie to die state hoaid of cdBcatloii ^ wiiSe 
the universities are ruled by the BOR. 

That split would harm, rather than help education in 
Fk»ida, and would result in near dictatorial powers in the 
hands of a lew over 'education ia the state. Constitution 
revmoo 8 would do away with one system of checks thirt is 
vital to tbm woMngs of a demooacy. 

At present, the state board of education is the Florida 
Cabinet, and all of the ^»abinet members must ultimately 
be responsive to the voters. If the cabinet loses its powers 
as the state board of educatioii, the people lose their say in 
how $2.6 hittion is ^eiit on ediuation in the state. 

Neidier tfie cabinet nor the l^ttlatme oould exort mu<^ 
control over the workings of an appointed, autiHiomous 
board of education or Board of Regents. 

Granted, Florida's present education system is not the 
best, as the current state of affairs shows. The cabinet 
wpemdB a minimal aflMNMt of tmie in its capacity as the 
board of education, and serves much too often as a mere 
ml^berstamp for the dictates of Education Ccmmissioner 
Ralph Turlington. 

An appointed board of education and a separate Board 
of Regents would meet the task full time, it is true. 

But the oithmite price we would have to pay — Iom^ 
coaML over a great deal oi the education pcrfky set and 
ad^ng another layer of bureaucracy between the people 
and the powers that control education, is much too steep 
for us. 

We therefore join such diverse groups as the Florida 
Student Association, the State Council of Student Body 
Pfeendents, tbe Florida Association of School Admini- 
strators and the Florida Democratic and Republican 

Parties in voting no on revision 8. 



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Midiaei Wbite Advortising Blaoi«er 



• • • • 



Gail Abers. Gregg Anderson, 
FhmecBarfa«aH«VMw Jooetyn 



ri*d Bm^ Nancy BoughanMr, Marie DomBi'ni^ Lin 




Paranoia still strikes deep 



Behind Blue Eyes 

^HHHIHII^H^^^H^^^HiBHHHHIHHI^BHIHUIH^^^il' 



lyy daiifil vogt 

For the bst few years Fve -had 
this strange feelmg whenever Vm 
around a fiolkeinan. I seem to 
cringe with paranoia and get real 
nervoos whenever one comes 
near me. 

it's not really the pnlkTHMn 
himself that makes me nervous 
and paranoid, it's more the 
feeling that be could hassle the 
heD out of me if he really wanted 
to. And that bothers me because 
of incidents I9ce this: 

Recently a friend of mine wCTt 
up to Georgia for the weekend 
and, pardy becanse of his own 
stupidity, got fined 990 for 
"scratcUi^ off." Typically, he 
had to pay up in cash money 
before he was allowed to leave the 
police station. 

The most depressing aspect, 
however, was the vindictive 
attiti^ taken by the officer, who 
had obviously noted well my 
friend's oat-of-state tag. The cop 
explained that one time he was in 
Florida and had committed a 
simflar offense and had to pay 
$150. Therefore, the cop said, my 
friend was lucky fas fine wasn't 
higher. 

Lucky or not, my friend got 
ripped-off, bad. He didn't end ^ 



citizen's testimony is always 
considered second dass when a 
pohoeman's testimony contra- 
dicts it. 

The injustice ci law enforce- 
ment's apparent infidffliility is 
frightening for those who, in the 
nomud course of a day, break 
several laws. 

Before I make enemies of every 
law enforcement officer in the 
sute, I better explain myself. I 
have nothii^ against policemen, 
but I object to the amount of 
power given them. It's not the 
man behmd the badge that gets 
on my nerves, it's what the ba^ 
let's him do to someone. 

In a society where supposedly 
everyone is equal, for the 
government to sanction a group to 
be more powerfU tfian the rest of 
us creates paranoia on a mass 



For criminals to be scared of 
police power is a good thing, but 
when everyone else gets paranoid 
at the same time, something is 
wrong. 



Letters 



Anybody who has ever been 
riding down the street when a 
pofice car poHs up behind knows 
the feeling. And anyone who's 
had this happen while blowing a 
reefer learns what a tush extreme 
paranoia can be. 

Smoking a joint is not a crime 
against anytnidy, but the 
policeman says he still must 
enforce the law. True, he's just 
doing his job, but some of the 
Jaws he en fo rce s are about ten 
years behind, and changes in 
society have made them out- 
moded. Rumors diat son^e area 
officers occasicmally smoke while 
oo duty, if true, are heartenmg. 

I haven't always had such a 
healthy distaste for law enforce- 
ment. When I was younger I 
thought all policemen were good 
Samaritans who would help get a 
car out of a ditch if it was stuck, or 
help get your money back if it was 
stolen. For almost all policemen, 
that's probably still true today. 

Now that I'm a little older, 
however. r\e grown a bit more 
cynical. 1 know now that even if 
you have done nothing at all 
illegal, a cop, if acting only oo 
assumption, can hassle the shit 
out of you if he wants, and get 
away with it. 



Biking problems solved 



a litde mU>er wUle crossing a 
busy street, he jast coded dp 
madder thn he! ^tkteop who 
happened to see him do it. 

Certainly other countries in the 
world have a much more 
right-wing pofice force, and, Vm 
not suggesting all cops in 



bad as those in Hiteier's Germai^ 
or Anmi*s Uganda. 

However, somette ig is wron^ 
with ^.mmgiiiiiiiiy where a 




I'd Ifte to thank someone w ho 
has played a prominent role in 
making the bicycle trip from 
Alumni Village to campus a safer 
one — Housing Director Sherrili 
Ragans. 

I recently notified Ms. Ragans 
of two dangerous conditions 
rehrted to -using the bike path; 
excessive sand near the stadium 
(causfttg die bicyclist to perhaps 



dangerously lose control) and 
automobiles blocking the path 
while going past stop signs and 
waiting for Lake Bradford Kd. 
traffic to cease. Through her 
quick letter to the Cit> of 
Tallahassee traffic enginer. both 
problems have been eradicared. 

Thanks for vour expeditious 
response to these pr<*lems, Ms. 
Ragans. 

MarkAflftii^i 




Blue Money 



Fair: a soul of money 



by ken lewandoski 

arte/ fvatwrtt •#H»r 

I may be an anachronism, but I don't go to 
fairs for the rides, for the games, or for any 
other reason other than the agricultural 
exhibits. 

Yep, forget the giant Parisian sewer rats, 
the alligator woman, the kewpie dolls, and 
give me canning contests, bake-offs, square 
tomatoes the size of my head, beef cattle 
the stature of Clydesdale horses and I'll be 
ecstatic. 

From this point of view, the North Florida 
Fair is somewhat disappointing. The 
agricultural exhibits are hidden away in the 
obscure eastern part of the fairgrounds. 
There is virtually no canning on exhibit, and 
it's impossible to spy a prize-winning pie. 

And the vegetables (oh, the vegetables 
I'd hoped to see mammoth squash with skin 
streched so tight it's about to burst, 
cucumbers as large as baseball bats, 
pumpkins that could serve as playhouses for 
small children, and veritable amber waves 
of prize grains), the vegetables at the fair. 



even the prize ones, looked like rejects from 
Publix. 

The fair does, however, make a fairly 
good showing in livestock and poultry (with 
the notable exception of any hogs worthy of 
the name), and the qualities of these should 
be noted. 

Understand, it is not my practice to wax 
eloquent on the virtues of barnyard 
animals, but it is truly awe-inspiring to look 
into the big, bovine eye of an Angus bull 
that is as tall as, or taller than, yourself and 
that weighs in at around 1500 pounds. 

Just as surprising at the fair is to notice 
what looks to be an average cow, and to 
discover that it is only a year-old calf. 

The North Florida Fair may also boast of 
its rooms of poultry and dairy goats. There 
are hens and roosters of every breed, color, 
and size, and about twenty goats with 
inscrutable faces. 

There are very few individual livestock 
entries; they are, for the most part, from 
large farms, and the fair merely becomes an 
advertising vehicle for breeds and 




They don 'l make -em like they used to 



bloodlines. 

That about does if for the agricultural 
exhibits, and the implications of this fact 
are saddening. Our state fairs, the 
traditional high point of the year for 4-H 
clubs, the Future Farmers of America, and 
miscreants like myself, have shifted their 



focus from the farm to the bank, from farm 
culture to the cheap thrills of neon, bad food 
and stuffed animals. 

The North Florida Fair, like so many of 
our cultural events, retains only its 
hollowed shell, while its soul has been 
replaced with money and gaudy trinkets. 



You pay your money^ and you take your chance 




by howard libin 



He's about to say, 'Three for a 
quarter, " Then, he'Msay, "AnoUm 
qumter, mother ^nm chances. 
Wo(Mn If this necklace look nhe on the 
little darUn' back home. Come on. 



photo t>y joyce harper 



ys/hat's a quarter. "And you grit your 
teeth and say to yourself, 'Tm goin ' to 
beat this bastard, " as you hand over 
yow cokt. He smiles andsai0 thank you. 



Fairgoers will tell you that there seems to 
be an aroma of fast money in the air. as 
carnies never stop calling out for the next 

player. 

"Don't be shy; give it a try,** hollers a 
worker to the people on the midway. 
"Break any two plates lake home a big 
one." 

"This games a rip,** replies a 
scraggly-haired teen in a denim jacket. 
"The plates are made of rubber.*' 

The carny behind the counter smashes a 
dish with a softball and sends the pieces 
flying all over the floor. 

•*It doesn't matter how many times I try 
to defend the game," says Larry Doniker, 
an apprentice plumber from Wildwood, 
New Jersey. "People will believe what they 
want to believe. 

Carnivals are subject to suspicion by the 
nature of thehr transactions — cash with no 
receipts. Indeed, the carnival supports the 
adage, let the buyer beware. 

**Sure the games are liaed/* Doniker 
sayt. **Like any business the cost of what 
you sell IS taken into eoeskksstion before 
you set the price." 

"By fixing a game, I mean that if too 
many rings are landing on the neck of tli^ 
bottle, just get smaller rings," he aikte. 



"Eventually you will get a combination yoi 
can live with." 

According to the workers, the industry i 
changing. More people than ever before art 
going to the fair, spending more nmoney 
than they did before. The amount of prizes 
given out has increased as well. 

The current trend is for games that can 
handle high volumes of people with a 
minimum of rules. Games which ask you to 
put one ball in a hole or to ring one block to 
win your choice of prizes are replacing 
games with long lists of confusing rules. 

"People are plain stupid." says Joie 
Catania, who operates a guess-your-weight 
stand. "They Just don't pa> attention to 
what their doing.** 

According to Catania there are different 
kinds of games, just like there are different 
kinds of investments. All people are not 
willing to accept the same amount of risk. 
There are some who play games where 
there is a winner every tinM. and tone who 
only go for broke. 

Todecide on tiie difficulty of a gaa». fook 
at the size of the prize (some cost as much 
as S30 each). Remember, the bigger the 
prize, the fewer given out on any particular 
day. although those who win really come 
out ahead. 

**1 don't guess people's weight right all 
the time, but I don't care," Catiota said. "I 
get a dollar and they get a ftfty-cent toy." 



I 






4t *rt»fft,(ig# Wi^'dsg. 'Vt^rfVi/^' 

y^- uU' *rj|H "^ir^e V/nft^ »-^.ri^ 



i^t.^,f 4 W'. -*f Hii^M- *: :i>*: 





I 



JIMMY CR 

/S AUVE AND 
WELL AT 



i4i^4 JMi4 f I U0 §$&im$^ Mi iMiir 

mrjfmm A4mt^m If jfm lir 

<iMf)4#/ M ijK$40fm Art fiwmdjfua 

J^*^ l^^l^^AH' 4lMMP|||k , TL"^ 



^r^iKr Mi ljd>>^ ICaf^. A4iiiMM«Mi » free 



Pidk Mi fiill all over kxm. 

«r file AHey fUr»nf/ft*n whert *t,^, V/»in4 
Affair aiMl Loliinaii'Me*«^^ 'x^ukH rrtpect- 









Swamps atn 

both T«>mniv N 

Pastime l><n». rr 

Lynn Mag»n anj 
else?) Both nig| 
The Sub antV 
with Tallahasv.< 
and Saturday 
wit! ease the 

only. 

Disco-goers 

Foi and 21st CI 
College Entcrtf 
disco nijjht San 

Ba&ooin. Adml 



Moore Audiri 
Troppo. * 7:30 
Godzilla** and 
fhow tonight. 

Leon Coun 
Experimental H 
film clips fcatii] 
Brooks. All fre< 

Florida Theai 

Mall Theatre! 

Tallahassee 



the 



Bruno 



phis 



ano 



Friday 




AT WEEK'S END Friday November 3 1978 ' 7 



End 



ively appear tonight and Saturday night. 

Swamp water blues and country twangs can be heard at 
hdth Tommy's, where Southern Lights perform, and at the 
Pastime Downstairs All-Nite Bottle Club and Grill where 
Lynn Magin and Midnite begin playing at midnight (when 
else'') Both night spots are open tonight and Saturday. 

The Sub and Pub downtown will have some funk for ya 
with Tallahassee mainstays Collage gettin' down tonight 
and Saturday, while acoustic sounds from Del and Jack 
will ease the workday blues out at the Capitol Inn tonight 
only. 

Disco-goers can boogie at Big Daddy's. Byron's, the Sea 
Fox and 21st Century Fox weekend-long. In addition, the 
College Entertainment Organization will have its own 
disco night Saturday from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the Union 
Ballroom. Admission is free. 

flicks 

Moore Auditorium: Friday and Saturday, ** Allegro Non 
Troppo," 7:30, 9 and 10:30 for $1.50. with "Bambi Meets 
Godzilla" and "Bambi's Revenge." Fifty cent midnight 
show tonight. "5.000 Fingers of Dr. T." 

Leon County Public Library, Northwood Mall: 
Experimental Films, including "Star Trek Bloopers." and 
film clips featuring Groucho Marx, King Kong and Mel 
Brooks. All free at 7:30 p.m. tonight. 

Florida Theatre: "The Cheap Detective." 

Mall Theatre: "Bom Again." 

Tallahassee Mall Cinema: I, "Up ' "II. double 



oooo< 



LPO 



FRIDAY-SATURDAY 

Moore Auditorium 
7:30, 9:00, 10:30 
Admission $1.50 



ALLEGRO NON TKOPPO 

15 not one of those 
"foreign *art'f ilms — 

Xt's an aniTnated 
feature-— A hilarious 
parody of "FANTASIAV 

CSome people go so far 
as to sa^ it has the 

best animation in 
the last 10 tjears.') 





Bruno BazKtKA 

Allegro NonTroppo 

(don't let the namefoolyou) 

Released by New Line Cinema 

plus BAMBI MEETS GODZILLA 

and BAMBI'S REVENGE 
Friday Midnlte 50* Show: 5000 
FINGERS OF DR. T 



feature. Escape from Wiuh Mountain and Return to 
Witch Mountain." * 
Varsity Triple: 'Midnight Express. * ' A Wedding * and 

"Interiors." 

Capitol Cinemas: "Sound of Music." "Animal House," 
"Grease." and "The Big Fix." 

Capitol Drive- In: "Who is Killing the Great Chefs of 
Europe?" with z-rated midnight show. 



GSU 




GRADUAH STUDfNT UNION 

Inauguration 
Celebration! TODAY 

7.30 p.m. Leon- Lafayette Room 
— Oglesby Union 
Union speakers, fa fr eshm fU s , 

and entertainment. 
All graduate students and UFF 
members welcome! 



. .^mm ^^^^^^^^ ^r%. 



FREE FROM 
TROUBLE 

We return worn 
parts for your 
inspection, then 
back the whole 
job in writing. 



★ 




> We'll aei caster, camber and 
toe-in to manufiMrtttfer'e origuial 
specificeikm. 

< No extra coet for cars with 
fact<Hy air or torsion bars. 

> ^artM eztm, if needed. 



WE 
HOMOfI 



FIRESTONE 
REVOLVING 
CHARGE 



•Master Charge * Diners Club 
• American Express 'Visa 
• Carte Blanche 



e-cyl 
Amer. 



We'll install new resistor plugs. 
ig:nitiaD points and condenser; 
set point dwell and ttming ; 
adjust carburetor and more. 
V-8's and some air conditioned 
eaffv extra. 



; LUBE& 

I 

I 



FEATURE OFFER 



"1 



OIL CHANGE 



Here's an inex|>ensive but 
valuable service recommended 
every 4,000 to 7,000 miles for 
most vehicles. Included are up 
to five quarts of oil and a 
professional chassis lulMrication. 




88 



All cars and 
light trucks. 



CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT. 
CLIP A SAVE! 




J 



DOUBLE BELTED OFFER 

Deluxe Champion Sup-R-Belt 



Size A78-13, blackwall. 

Plus $1.71 F.E.T. and old tire. 



$30 



LARGER SIZES 
AND WHITEWALLS 
LOW PRICED TOO 





ne 



30-60-90 DATS SJIME AS CJUI 



HUSrONESiOK 

Mm -M 7:30-5:30 Srt 1 1l 5 



501 N MONROE 

222-Ollt 



SI 



1^ 



life on Hungry Si.: Evelyn 
cuds people on food stamps 




5 



'^Pp If 



II 




Private Lives 




»'0 



- ■ --S. t - - 



I 



I 



ALiA» 



Wakull 



a 




GIJH,TT OF INCI11NG WNOCENT 
BACK A\0 EMOY SOM£ F£« USIBWIG 



TO srr 



tenr 
I 



:-r -t; 



£ ; .jrr' . 1..,-: tj; _ 



^»ai ic» Hit Cc * < 



f ■ 

gf j f r- 



... . , . , , JO- . . ^ - - ^ 




TOMY'S 




C 



"H'l^r;. jkffi't get mat die%'re 



turn to FOOD STAMPS, pagm§ 



REBEL 




Warefu 



<ngv. ■' 

LINDA 




South 



d Stai 



,ewifig tlicfC »rc crrj 
, , ucp tli««i 

t , ,„.ntcrvtews.Eachof< 
:,ng myself, this 
Manv dkiiti want t 
Ljedtoth«iiil»ct«w«^^ 
Lrchasc the ftamfw that 
pc.iallyatHiellwtofthci 
l it iheygtveupaiKlconK 

ii(h. 

M invofthe people on : 
f i fthly check, theb socil 
|r public assistance chcc( 
Jicni right about the thin 
They immediately comt- 1 
Lamps so they know thc>' 
LiHigh food for the monti 
r >r instance a three pc! 

rd SI 44 a month wort] 
lal depending on income 
up the cost. They nia 
for $144 worth ot si 
jetting SIOO bonus stamp 

Starting Dec. 1 there 
[nvolved in getting t ' 
iimply give them the >. 
Mamps. w hich is really quittl 
if the people, for instance 
lavc difficulties commg oi 
stamps. 

Many of them are on mail 
lhat requires they send in a 
iioneyorder toget their sfa 
lasis. Just getting thnr h< 
Mil have to get out and pkl 
irdcr and mail it in to us 
Now there is a disadvani 



Volunta 
Action 



Tick 
com] 
all t 
ORl 



FSU l'> 
(Weast F« 



Naii.i 

Mailing 
City & 
Telcphoii 

Arc you 
Enclosc(| 

N(yrL: 
Check 11 1 



Pert 1*1 III. 
I 





ATWEQC'SaiO Frictey, 



am / 



i ood Stamps 



ewing there arc errors made, hut we 
I ^cep thero to the nufiiiniiBi. 

>n a typical day I see about 1 2 to 15 people 
i X 1 1 interviews. Eacholoyr eigltt wofters, 
iding myself, see tto OMiiy. 
;^ny clients want their infomatioii 
led to them because tiwy'fe not ready to 
hasc the stamps that day or the lines, 
ciallyatthefirstoftheraonth^sresokMig 
they give up and come back inter in tfie 
,th. 

Many of the people on food stamps receive 
monthly check, their social security ckedts 
' public assistance checks, and they get 
ni right about the third of the month. 
They immediately come in to buy their food 
mps so they know they're going to have 
nough food for the nKmth. 
For instance a three-person household is 
. lotted $144 a month worth dl food stamps. 
And depending on income and expenses we 
sci up the cost. They may pay, for instance 
544 for $144 worth of stamps, therefitte 
ctting $100 bonus stamps. 
Starting Dec. 1 there will be no cash 
involved in getting food stamps. We will 
simply give them the $100 worth of bonus 
stamps, which is really quite a benefit to some 
of the people, for instance, the elderly who 
ha\e difficulties coming out to pick up their 
stamps. 

Man V of them are on mail issuance but even 
that requires they send in a cashier's check or 
money order to get their stamps on a monthly 
basis. Just getting their bonus stamps they 
will have to get out and pick up that money 
order and mail it in to us. 
Now there is a disadvantage in this. For 




Evelyn at her desk 



instance, for a household of three, they may 
get their $100 bonus coupons but what are 
they going to do with the $44 that they 
normally would need to get their $144. 

Starting in December, you can imagine 
what will happen to the $44. It w ill not be put 
aside for the cost of food later in the month 
when they are finished using their $100 worth 
of free stamps. During December 
probably extra toys, clothes for the y y 
kids, stuff like that will be bought. 



.USED c^/? . 

BUY tSILl* TRADE 



73 

74 Mustang II 

74 Pinto — AC 

73 Otarger S.E. 
73 0p«lManta 

73 Mazda MM 
3 V.W. Bugs 

IVM 



Jtiirt 

liiiiis 
lililiili 



Voluntary 
Action Center 



224-0581 





Tickets to the 14th Annual Madrigal Dinner pageantry at Florida State University will be sold by mail order only. The 
complete price for each ticket is S8. 50. Your tickets will be mailed to you beginning November 13. Please be sure to read 
all ticket instructions carefully to avoid a delay in fUling your order. PLEASE REMEMBER THAT ALTHOUGH EACH 
ORDER HAS PERSONAL HANDLING, NO CHANGES OR ADJUSTMENTS CAN BE MADE ONCE YOUR ORDER 

HAS BEEN RECEIVED. 

1 



CUT ALONG THIS LINE 



FSU 1978 MAIJRIGAL DINNERS ORDER FORM 

(Please Print) 



Please note: THOSE WISilNG TO SIT 
TOGETHER MUST SUBMIT THEIR 

ORDERS TOGETHER. 



I 



I 



Name 

Mailing Address 
City & State 



I Telephone No. 



I 



Arc you: Student 
Enclosed Find $_ 



Faculty— Staff. 



First time attended: Yes, 
Other 



Zip Code 



No. 



for. 



tickets @ $8.50 each. 



(amount) (number) 
NOTE: Limit of 12 tickets (1 tabic) per individual request. 



j Check h 



ere: 



No specific night preferred. 

If you want a specific night, indicate numerically your preference of evening 
below: 



. Friday, December 1 
. Saturday, December 2 

Sunday, December 3 
_ Friday, December 8 
. Saturday, December 9 



_ Check here if you desire non- 
J smoking location. 



PLEASE TAKE THCSE STEPS: 

1. Mjdte checks payable to: 

FLORIDA STATE UNIV. 

2. ftcpaie a leg^size, stamped, 
self-adckessed, envelope and en- 
close it with your order. 

3. Mail your check, order, and 
damped envelope to: 

Ccittral Ticket Office 
University Union 
Florida State University 
Tallahassee, Florida 
32306 

SORRY, NO EXCHANGES 
ORREFIMIS 



[ Herformances start_promptly at 6:30 p.m. and last about Vh hours. j 





^^^^ 




Seafood festival set for Saturday 



by cox 



to 

CitT Park. 



hmg b»ca:^ ine cxmxai io«ni of 
be uwamitV > >d>e tlm veekesd as tlK 
OQ0IS the t»ci»t"& decks pai^e to enfosr 
at the Fknda 



the fcsmal's scafooc Ditnqoe^ m 
«• liX 319 jBfi kcsii oi lAc 



at die fiuk tBdsde 



year. 

N-LwcaHbcf 
f€;stivai 



feslhrai is ai 
for a 

b itas been is 



15 



"it bef» as dK Apaiaciiiroia Manfi Gcas,** 






iGraduales 

BECCME A LMNfmrS ASStSTANT 



TIk crabs, bcwigftf by 
itf a saaS eadosed 



, are placed m dbe 



oa tbt bay 
iabasbMgl 



tbe ton 
for Ike 



li30 p.m.. rq 



m at S 



at 1 p IB. EST, die 
lor tbe 5,000 
wm be beki 




of tbe best 



The entire day is cxwutoikd widi a 
«e boos of tbe mniig — 
vS be leavaig tbe smafl bay, 
ioSof 



ball lastimf 
the 
tote 



■ THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR 

■ PARALEGAL TRAINING 

3376 Peachtree Rd NE 
Adania Ga 30326 

4.02 p;;^.f<Vf^ 




\ 



FLAMBEAU 



CLASSIFIED 



9M^m. -4:00 p m m 



onfrtiSay Hov 
to m%m int^nmcm 



(404) 




Wine 

C£UAI 



OPEN 



, .£ AN AFFAIR 

AT Rtl l O'S 

JAZZ BY THE ' 
"SOUND AFi 




North 
224-71C1 



Hmms Kornel 
Chiini|Mifinf 

Tflsfing Seminar 

Nov. 9lli 8;30 P.li. 



ACVMar 

Producis 



HMRCUnERS INC 

GRAND OPENING SPECIAL 
Pemis Keg. ^ Now 25~ 
Henna k«9- Now 15* 

TUStt OK. let l«7t 

1 Hoif arts $r* WAU-MB WaCOME I 



/ 



E.C3V aeneraoon has had their 



a OSECH A CHONG flm 
K aOsbad Uurd and Ha.:dy. 

Ik art. 



CUEECH ii CHONG «e Che coraed^ 



and a 



TVs SO 

that saiclinb ID rock axnedy 




Mon -FH. S a.m. — 8 p.m. 
Sstuffday ta^ — 4 pan. 



WMtT< 



(next to 1 _ 
Subway \222-666^v^ 



Slarrwri9 Che«cb Marin and Ibmmv Choog 
^ EdKAdams Scrocher Manin 

by TioRMny Chong & Checch Marin 



,R BESTIBCTO JrSiyj 




l8l 



!:» 4ili tf>M M f;tt 



ICi 

ink/ 
in u 



U Mainst 



I 



by IcatM fall 



rtU 



Count Draciila" open 
^U's Maimtage Tbeatrt 
kyt of tbe werewolf and 
idkmoe. 
)irector Amnon Kabatc' 
ielightAri prodttctioa 
asyhfaaia horror witV 
iiMitioi of comedy 
>rderbia on tbe melodrar 
le gloomy spires of a sar 
igland. tbe cast weaves 
lie of roadaien and vamij 
idienoe anxiously await! 
iie of the fair Miss Nina. 
Wrapped io the cloak 
jad.** Andrew Watts (aj 
ount Dracttla) a^ Kathi I] 
lis victim, Nina) deli' 
rformances and gboulisl 
I KxltMnty aodieBce. 

\iding them ia dieir nigl 
\hc saucy little English! 

hlozberg practically steal j 
Kr Cockney peftaest. 
The heroes. Marker (I 
r). Dr. Seward (Rod 
lenrick Van Helsing (Mid 
cminiacent of Larry. Moe 
ir campy bits. But, it is 
the plot thickens (along v i 
Tree Rankin as the 
fers an insanely bUai 
luring the slower and roui 



run 



SAVE *3 T( 




WSA- 



j' 

»' ■ . ■ I 



1: 



AT WEEK'S END Friday, November 4, 19/8 / 11 



tes 



DISTANT. 



»soci«||po. 



as a 



LLMY 
20-OEC. 14 

FOR 

IG 



0 



nal9g9l Training s 

■rid ay, Nov 17 from 
ieet interested stu- 
\t Office or The Na- 
*• fkiti, ME, S4tH9 



[Hardy. 



ims, 
duo. 



ann 
ion® 



« 

9:50 
50 



Diana Schlozherg 
and Pat Skipper 

in a scene from 
%ount Dr&eula'' 



mpense^ comedy 

* 

W Mainstage 



liy kathi fellers 

HambMu writer 

Count Dracula" opened last night on 
IfSU's Mainstage Theatre, greeted by the 
I bays of the werewolf and the howls of the 

iudience. 

Director Amnon Kabatchnik has created 
\i delightful production of the dassic 
[ransylvania horror with a marvelous 
ombinatioh of comedy and suspense 
bordering on the melodramatic. Set amid 
(he gloomy spires oi a sanatorium in 1920 
England, the cast weaves a fiendishly gory 
tale of madmen and vampires, while the 
audience anxiously awaits the grnesooAe 
[fate of the fair Miss Nina. 

Wrapped in the cloak of "tlie livtng 
I dead." Andrew Watts (as the villainoas 
Count Dracula) and Kathi Lee Diamimt (as 
his victim, Niaa) deliver admirable 
performances and ghoulish treats for their 
Moodthirsty audience. 

Aiding them in their ni^^y rendezvous, 
the saucy little En^ish maid, Diana 
Schlozberg practically stoals tke show with 
her Cockney pertaess. • 
The heroes. Marker (Lec Gundershei- 
mer). Dr. Seward (Rod Fairbanks), and 
Henrick Van Helsing (Midiael Fortner) are 
reminiscent of Larry, Moe and Curly with 
their campy bits. But, it is all in good fun as 
the plot thidiens (akmg with the dialects). 
Cree Rankin as the madaian, Reefield, 
offers an insanely hilarkws diversion 
during the slower and tonglier moments. 




1 



The technical effects are to be credited 
for much of last night's success. After all, 
what would Dracula be without rolling 
mist, spectral lights, and ghostly violins? 
The set is a wonderful rendition of a drafty 
English mansion, complete with spires and 
of course, a door, the creaking of which is 
guaranteed to send audiences into gales of 
laughter. 

Though there are weak spots in tHe 
Mainstage season opener, it has to be 
counted as Tallahassee's rival to **The 
Rocky Horror Picture Show." It is actually 
well worth the exorbitant prices charged. 

The students are to be credited for 
tackling such an awesome piece of 
literature. Though some aspects do fail — 
such as dialects and movement — the 
whole production leaves the audience 
howling and screaming for more. Like 
"The Rocky Horror Picture Show," the 
members of the audience can truly feel a 
part, and are encouraged to participate 
with their best werewolf howls at the 
opening of each act. 

The Mainstage production of **Count 
Dracula'* continues tonight through 
Saturday and Nov. 8-11 beginning at 8:15. 
Tickets for FSU students are $2.50 
weeknights and $3 weekends and $3 and 
$3.50 for the general public. Reservations 
can be made by calling the Mainstage Box 
Office at 644-6500 or 644-6501. 

Be sure to wear your wolfbane. 




JAZZ 



Features 
Bill Kennedy Sax 
Liruistjy Saryent Pian 



INTRODUCTORY 
SPECIAL 



off 




BUY ONE DINNER 

and the second one 
is HALF PRICE 
with this coupon. 



fMI 



I 



I 



(•) 



I ATIN VMKRIC AN RKSTAl K 

serving over 30 years 



320 East Tennessee St. 
222*2337 



J 



ft ccKLT 



BEER ^KtClAL 

(offer Good Nov. 3ni Hm Nov. Mi) 

MIKE'S TEXACO 



1! ! mm 



OIPELAND & TiNNESSEE 
PHOm - 224-7989 



lit 

Hi ' 



1^ 



MILUR 




A TAX 



12 OZ. BOniES 



KEGS - KEGS 



KEGS 



cigaratiM ST |ttn 

OPEN 24 HOURS 
7 DAYS A WEEK 




i • 



• # " • • 




12 / .Friday. November 3. 1978 AT WEEK'S BID 




Beverly SUi» 




Sills: effortless vocal graee 



by nature Johnston 



Beverly Sills opened the 1978-79 Artist 
Sms Weda^day aigiit with a wefl- 
reeelved performance ol what 



The 49-year-old singer gave no 
indication of having to work hard to ddxwx 
her product. The evening's program was 
no picnic, either. The aria from **Thc 
Bather of Seville" is a showpieoe of the 
coloratora repertory. This was Sffls* best 
olSenng. 

On the other end of the spectram Is tiie 
sostained or "soft" niq;ing, iduch is also 
voy difficolt, te^^lag much vocal 
control. Again, she gave an apparently 
elfortiess performance In esecntlr^ these 
l^ato pieces, Koechlin's "Si ta le veux" 
and "Oh, qoand je dors" by Liszt. 

The mofe spirited mmbers were a piece 
of cake for Sills due to her outgoing, 
vigorous intetpretatioQ. 

Sills was oompiet^ in control of the 
show, in spite of the fact that she was not 
n^B^ her preferred accompanist, Charles 
Wadsworth. The man at tiie piano 



Wednesday ni^, Samuel Sanders, is her 
hack-np man. ffovertheiess, SUls radiated 
confidence and seemed completely at ease. 

The concert had a honey, casual feel 
about it, due hi large measure to Sffls' 
unusually warm personality. She does not 
come across as tiie prima donna thirt she is. 
In &ct, she most graciously stepped to die 
back of the stage on her &st of two encores 
so that the overflow audience seated 
en-stage could better hear her sing. 

The evening on the whole was diverse in 
the opera range and generally very 
entertaining. How sad that we as a 
listening audience have a Beverly Sills for 
only, say, 30 or 40 years of a lifetime. The 
recording, as much a blessing as it may be. 
does not capture the essence of the live 
voice. 

Somecrttics wffl say that Sills is past her 
prime. She is the first to admit that she is 
not the Beverly SiHs of ten years ago. 
However, my feelings ate echoed in the 
ovcilieard remarit of one matronly opera 
fan, "If this is out-to-pasture, give me 
some of It. . 



»» 



NOW SHOWING AT KENT THEATRES 



FLORIDA 

ROCKING CHAIR 



Downtown 224-6246 



THEATRE 



AU 

Seats 



99c 



Peter Faulk 7:50 9: 
"CHEAP DETECTIVE ' 



40 



Dean 

Jones 



Walt 



iiiilMliitiHilii 




i 



5:00 7:00 9:00 Anne 
"BORN AGAIN" Francis PG ^ 



ESCAPE FROM WITCH MOUPiTAIir' 

"•"niRN TO WITCH wo«m?T«imf" 



Cheech 



II 



8:00 9:50 

UP IN SMOKE 



Starts No. 1 "CORVETTE SUMMERS" 
7:30 No. 2 "F.I.S.T.' 



ft 



'IWNO m nUJilG THE GREAT CHEFS OF EUftOPT ' 



Twin Cinema in the Tallahassee Mall 

will show a special movie 
Friday & Saturday at 12:00 midnight. 

lt% a mxual romp through an advdt toy 

factory at our X-rated midnight show 

Friday and Saturday night. 
12:30 each night Capital Drive-In 



BUDDY'S NORTHSIDE SPORriNG GOODS 

AND SCUBA CENTER 



220-0 WMt nNvpt 

U S D- Wetsuits: 

1/4 in. N Y- II. $99.95 

^16 in. N Y 11 $94.95 

Swimoster B C* Vest ......$80.00 





o 

m 
O 



IT 

9-laiii 
Union Ballroom 

(CEO & IPG ore cosponsoring the Disco Mglit) 

lesson 

Door prnes 

Omco CoMoot 

food and drink will be available for Ihoso who desire it. 
The prizes wil be coning fiwa: 

THE Mel's ROOM II (hairstyles) RECORD BAR (records) 
IZA m (piiiM) SUZIE'S (ttHfk Mdl) ($25 9%rtHiote 

Come dance the night away at DISCO NIGHT on Satufday, the 4th of 
November in the Union Ballroom. CEO is brioging you an imcomparable 
night of fun from 9 p.m. to 1 in the morning. There'll be a D J with hours 0* 
music, and we'll be giving away doorprizes donated by Record Bar anc 
Susie's of Tallahassee Mall, and awarding prizes to the best dancers in a 
series of dance contests throughout the night. There'll be lots of food and 
drink, and admission is free — so come to the Union ballroom on Saturday 
night and meet CEO . . . and dance! 

COMMUNICATIONS 




SU rev| 

by tai 

Ldcnts charged with v 
no longer have to fa 
,,^,rMt^ adintfiistrati 
^utioncr." according ^ 
itK-c James Lmn 
>-,th the adi>pfi«>n • 
irt. anv student chat 
ir mav now request a heai 
in included 
,utcs between student 
irrisi»ms to the vice 
. he ncv% rules, written, 
lallv bv the court, •'refleej 
^ nts and FSU official! 
s iulent judicial system.'] 
j-al Fru dman 

[previously, the court hi 
.irtngs and set punishmenj 
Jassic Catch-22 situatit>i 
sKcdure for actually doin| 
With passage of the 197j 
-w laws governing a stur 
^xesitated certain revisioi 
'WlM4««*ve done is w( 

Land co-op 

by naNab< 

Remember the water t 
i . se pages i|i wid-Oc 
u.aiicc to sec that waterfi 

People are currently 
fthare the preservation 
virtually untouched land 
east of Lloyd. Fifty a 
laced with beautiful 
hardwood trees, is to be 
wildlife refuge, with the 
sold in live-acre parcels 



THE TALLAHASSEE 

^atsang wiU present an aft< 
Saturday at 1 p.m. in tht 
(o^mi of the Union. An intro^ 
ind film will begin at 1 1 a 
CORRECnONt Gsmet 
^<>t the Student Consur 
ponsoring the **FSU Sh«n 
Dave Seibert is curren! 
^ 'vemmcnt cabinet membj 

iiiated with the SO 
S'esterdav. 
COBEECnONi The name 
^omen Voters coord ir| 
(inerva was misspelled 
imbeau. 




SU revises student judicial code 



ffL* 



by tsmara strunk 

students charged with vioUtions of the FSU condttct 
jc no longer have to f«cc a judkial process in whldi 
nivcrsity adminislrstors act as judge, jury, and 
.utioncr," according to student supreme court Chief 
slice James Linn. 

With the adoption of new rules of piocedufe hf the 
rt, any student charged with a violation of the conduct 
Bay now request a hearing befoie a joty of Mg peers, 
nn said. Also included are provisiiMis for 
sputes between stndoit orgaittiaitiaiis lad 
rt decisions to the vice president of student affairs. 
The new rales, written, studied, and piepared aiaiost 
tally by the court, ''reflect a deske on the part of both 
leots and FSU officials to eventually establish an 
i .tudeot judicial system," said student body Piresldent 
eal Friedman 

Previously, the court had the ambority to conduct 
anngs and set punishment lor those found guilty but, in 
lassie Catch-22 situation, did not have an adequate 
p^edure for actually doing so. 

Wiih passage of the 1974 Bnddey Amendment came 
laws governing a student's ri^t to privacy which 
ccesitated certain reviaSons in I^U policies. 
What we've done is we have g<me beyond the due 



process requtfements." said Mike MiUer. judicial officer 
m the ofBce of student affairs. 

The law requires that a student be given the option of 
appearing in an administrative hearing; at FSL one could 
instead opt to have the conduct committee or the student 
supreme court decide the case. 

**I would like to see the student supreme court play a 
more active role." Miller emphasized. 

The m^ority of cases, however, are settled in Miller's 
office. Most students, he said, wish to have conduct 
matters settled quickly, quietly, and with as few people 
involved as possible. 

A task force headed by Miller is looking into the 
operations and effectiveness of the judicial system, which 
•"as it is, may or may not remain intact," he said. An 
important aspect under consideration is whether or not 
violators of the conduct code actually learn their lesson 
from a university reprimand without going through the 
criminal proceedings they may have faced had they not 
been students. 

Miller said he feels many students find the threat <rf 
expulsion more traumatic than the threat of jail. 

Some universities employ a mandatory trial system to give 
the accused parties a feeling of actual legal proceedings. 
Miller, however, said he views the disciplinary system as 
less formal than a criminal svstem. 



Land co-op east of town seeks members I 



by neil abell 

flambMU staff writer 

Remember the waterfall pictured in 
^ese pages in raid-October? Here's a 
chance to see that waterfall for yourself. 

People are currently being sought to 
share the preservation of 150 acres of 
\ rfiially untouched land located one mile 
east i)t Lloyd . Fifty acres of the land, 
laced with beautiful streams and 
hardwood trees, is to be preserved as a 
wildlife refuge, with the remainder being 
^ ' ' in tu r-acTC parcels for the formation 



of a new land cooperative. 

A celebration on the land is scheduled 
for Sunday, and will include a tour of the 
countryside, a discussion of the best plan 
for the land's protection, and an old- 
fashioned covered dish picnic, complete 
with swimming and music. 

Details and maps to the land will be 
distributed Sunday morning at 10 a.m. . at 
505 Concord Road, which can be found by 
taking U.S. 90 east to the last right-hand 
turn before the truck route. All persons 
interested in participating in this project 
arc invited. 



Kn Brief 



mam 



THE TALLAHASSEE ECKANKAR 

jitsang will present an afternoon in ECK 
Wturday at 1 p.m. in the Leon-Lafayette 
[loom of the Union. An introductory lecture 
|ind film will begin at 11 a.m. 

CORRECTION: Garnet and Gold Key, 
|W the Student Consumer Union, is 
hpcmsoring the "FSU Shopper's Guide.'* 
pave Seibert is currently a student 
Uo^trnnient cabinet member and is not 
hffiliated with the SCU as reported 
l.tsterdav. 

CORRECTION: The name of League of 
pomcn Voters coordinator Karen 
jjinerva was misspelled in yesterday's 
I flam beau. 



In Brief policy: The Flambeau In Brief section, because 
of limited space, does not print notices of regular 
meetings Of memberstiip groups. Unless pre registration 
Is required, nK>ming events will be anhoimced the 
previous day and afternoon and evening events the same 
day as they occur. Only one notice will be run of each 
event, and all events must be open to the public. Notices 
will not be taken by telephone, but must be mailed to The 
Flambeau at FSU Box U-TWI or delivered to the 
Flambeau office at 204 N. Woodward Ave. by 1 p.m. the 
day before they are due to run. All notices should include 
day, time, place, cost, if any, and a contact number for 
The Flambeau. All items are subfact to sfandwrd editino. 



Weather 



Fair weather is forecast through 
tomorrow, with generally mild days and 
cool nights. The lows will be from the mid 
40s to around 50, and the highs near 80. 
Winds will be from the northeast at 10 
m.p.h. 



J.D/$ SPECIAL - Shampoo, 
Conditioner, and any style 
haircut - Just $6,001 

HENNA SPKUL - Every Mwiday only $11.95 

rls"f? Heima - includes Shempoo 
Irl/IIR "* 




Sony W« do NOT um» km 



ReconditioNing treatment 

Open 9-8 M-F 
9-5 Sat. 



.1 IZZ I f 

RtCCO'S 

f Kl. & SAT. 



1 



Get a free food of firewood 
with Mcb fUm- IVooAwMig 
Stove purchoM. - 

New sUpment of pots 
& hangers 

off aH hangiiv fen 

baskets 

Tom icouHTrar 

DARKH CENTERL 
eaaw.TMiiiip&sir 

165-3335 



~1 



V— — 



r/ 



k t 



Benefit Concert 

for 

The Food Policy Center 

featuring 

HARRY CHAPIN 

Sunday November 5, 1978 
8:00 P.M. Tully Gym 

$6.00 general admission 

Both Yankie Peddlers !^?°^ Richards 
FSU Union (Westwood Plaza) 

Ticket Office 

(Timberiane Shops) 
For further information call 644-6710 

/ '' 

An^ LV VO ~ Riptide Production 



yc *- ii»iiiii'*BiiMaifaj»ij» 



1 



I. 



I 

fi ^ 




.1- 
i 

m 





Classified Ads 




/EGETAKIAMS 

9* Htnt 



nu 











w'-^. &«aM, «r»-.- =- ^ 












,iMiiiiiiia>f^i 


TICKETS C 


FSU UF FOOl 
MX 224-4174 





WMTTEO A VfOLtN PLAY»I TO 



MOMOAf (SHEMMAOAr 
Lr^ us cTtcer up your Mm. wWi a 



S11 9S 




TWCflE Akt . 
EXPEAIEMCE 



-0 = : IVfTMOUT 



2121112 



use only 

at JO'S for 



To trie Ddts. 



Our 



nMML RMMT TO SHAAE 2 BCMIM 



be tn 224 
FTMay at 2p^. 



Part fff»--e sos ♦or »v8»»»t * a* Scan 



TUWA - M'E- ASS 1. - 


--■ *" ~ 0 i"? 


SODA at THC ruft 




Tann. St. Ilawi ipiii FWf . 




EVESYIOOY'S OONM 


HT 


Saving mgngr^w^j^aMg^ 


SSm 








anc 



SEMATOR STEVE WHATTA 
COMGRATULATKM^. I TOLl> YOU 
THE kick: BACKS WOULD 
YA IS AASMiNGTON 
BEST SCCAftOS 



mna tap* d^cJts 
T»i««a prortwcH art 4?^ ^ 



POOR 
A 



1011 AMTfum ISO 1 BP unfumlMlMk 
FfU AC t*uni« tenms cat>te pool 
222 1171 2231571 »ft«moon 



JOe MOa for HocirX 
PwMtKid' 



nWNMVCPe FENOEP AAAP IF 
MiTflflCfTEO IN A 600D SOUMO 
CALL OAWN MMVf MM THKU 
Fllf tlPf 



7 mm m 

ONI On 


•r oonfract at Oio 
m pool sowna pprf 
^ at 220215 or 22 


ma Half 








siuDEirrs WHO are parents 

STOP BY THE TABLE IN UNION 
FILL OUT DAY CARE SURVEY 
POP FREE CAMPUS SERVICE 
WOVEN DEMAND DAY CARE 

NOW! 

WALK WHERE THE INDIANS 

WALKED! Bdckpack(f*g - North 
Carolina m the snow For <-,oers 
no experience needed Dec 18 2^ i 

27 31. utnma space! ma7s«Mo. 

Tr. 



TRrCKY DICK" 
iMO YOUR FUTURE 

MCV OF STATE 



LOSTLAR«CKEMAtO! 
COLLIE MIX MED SIZC 
TRI-COLOREC VCSTLY 3LK 
LONG HAIR ANSA ERS TO KILO 
LOST tH =< AREA 

PLEASE CA*.i. 224 MM 



GOLDEN RETRIEVER 
WAS LOST SUN *!J AT 
- sE-5 'HE UNION FSU 
i-E-= VE GET HER BACK 
A»»C"~E5 GOlDCII Of 
S \532 FOR INFORMA 



REWARD 'C = 
I^pft2yr. otc Oidcii.&-d^ i^^-r 

: •ver, femiH, « 
5-:~ 'atooed an 

5" • ~ ; : no . "HJSt »00» 

ctosaty. If seen or found piMM » 






iSTnim^m found black lab call stma 



DEAREST FRAK 
HAPPY BDAY TOA 
FANTASTIC FRIBIO 

LOVE ALWAYS AB 



TYPING FAST AND ACCURATE 
TERM PAPERS, DISSERTATION, 
ETC REAS0MA8LE RATES «I>2F79 



WAKE UF! AMD f 
FROM SNOaZiW 



TO THE 



SON WHO STOUE MY 



H" ti < s tfoHart (H) for samples 
u-rj*Ui r^'. mat are fliodod far a Study 

ZnSm ^""^ a iiiii S itS Ti iil^ 

••on F Mawtial donors should CSMI 

644^M4 between tarn and Spm . 



JFKD 

You were never an 



FWSX 



/lOPfl 1900 IST KAPUT' 

fr^^ r^ UifMmmtbO&t dsmo^*; Will 

sell Whole or in Mnt, Call 



AorF la auMaaiOiny contract 

at Oscaola MaN Fool mww axar.Rm 

maid set-v.f-.e 'Jij<3/ rm Rec rm A Mt 
of good food 777 SWO anytinne 



Fast accurate typist-IBM carrectinc 




Durbin S7«.1fM 



'72 GremlMi X, excellent cond. 
104 V ~, Hartt 3-Spd ti^OOO or best. 
232-4497 Kaip trytno 



m VW automatic, recent tires, and 
bmUmry, AM FM ttereo, low mil 
f xcelKmt rorvj.t on Call 222 ^4? 



Desperately need 2 tickets te 
FSU'Fla. fame. WIN Rpy rosMMMt 
pried, CMl iii mt , 

Rmmts needed for large cooperatfva 
house. 1 WocK from FSU. 

food, COOllifML 

CaH234J0M 



Let POOR RICHARD'S hem your 
pants or leans for only $1.50 (wash 

and dr / l$f -f- bring me si>oes you plan 
to Mear w m«m) next to PiMrx in 
We<>nMOOc3 S^opp<ng Con t i r SM-21M 
Open 7 days a week. 



MONDAY NfOffT- 

TTvey are of great sentimeKlalt 
me and f would like ttiem 
No quf-stions dsked i^ anyone lias 
a wanderiag Jew la a day pet 
to a pM 

ringflMante 
a very 



rue Ott>er Bite Hair Salon and 
Platform Lounge presents NENA 
formally Of Hairsmith. Special 
introductory offer witti NENA- Ria SS 
haircut! Call 224-2749 or waM in and 
«fc for NENA 

APPLIANCES 

Will buy and -or haul off your 
pppliances. Call Marshall days 
Sg-IWt (pocket beeper] 



XXk>iNG SUITS S,A*,L.XL 
over 100 to dnoe from rag.: 
only S20. POOR RICHARDS I 
Publix & EdBtfd^ In 
Shoppi ng Center. S7A2TM 

Pan»»eilenic celebrates its 74th 
Anniversary or FSU can-»pus Nov. 
f-11 by helping in ihe fislit 



GREEKS 

Pvdiellentc F^i Formal Nov. t 
fpm-lam feafurine ELl. 




SAT.NOV4 FROM 10^2 AT 
BURGER CHEF.IOtf W TENN. 



Diane, wimin love you 
yoo *^urt me and you 
me, deify me, lift me 



71 OPEL GOOD CONO AfTSCO 
GOOO^HIES RADIO MO 




m? MCB BEAUTIFUL rebuilt 
engine trans, new radtals, tM, 
b«ti«m«s, carpet Bady pdrtdct 



72 GREMLIN, STICK, A C 
UXMML RUNS WELL 
f7f.21li 



PIN TO/3 AM very good condition 
rww gas tank new BaHfry new tiras 
M50 or best offer call syotroo 

70 MOB GT Car in excellent 

condition rh^rry rr^,wirt vvheeM. 
— to apprec»ate. 57a^«>ll. 



MOTOK DRIVE FOR CANON F-1 IN 
GOOD CONDITION PAY CASH 
CALL 724«Mf OR 
JONATHAN 



HELP! I NEED 3 TICKETS TO THE 
FLA. GAME I WILL PAY CALL 
. KARLA 222 9705 anytime before 
1l:ilFJil. 



APPLIANCE REPAIR 
Service on all major appiiarKcs, a^ 
conditioning and heating, Salcs- 
recdnditionad imifs wfffi ft day 
wmrrmtty. Call Marsfiall, 
flf9>70P9 (pocket beeper) 

LICENSED 



Need Cash? I buy & sell fixn. TV- 
tools-guitars fans heaters-art obiects 
DANNY'S YARD SALE 1017 Thom- 



FML non-smoker to share very nice 
quief 2l>drm turn apt close to FSu 
137 nrto-f </7u til -^ SOdepos call 575 0006 

ROOMMATE NEEDED ASAP 
SHARE NICE HOUSE NEAR 
CAMPUS fOO 4- UTILITIES 



•ASS LESSONS 
Jazz and Contemporary Styles 
TECHNIQUE AND THEORY 



IMPROVE YOUR GRADES' 
Send SI 00 for your 256 page, mail 
order catalog of Collegiate Research 
10.250 topics listed. Prompt Delivery 
Box 25907 B, Los flnnsmrcillf " - 
(213) 477-0220. 



Abortions, pregrvancy screening, 
birtfi control or healtn info call Ike 
Feminist Women's Health Center 
224 9600 

WE TAKE THE TIME TO DO IT 

perms and great natrcuts. Headquar- 
»trs2>17W.PemacalaSt.5gMmr 

Be good to year hair 90 if will be good 
10 you. Lanham Products now at 
Headquarters Hatrcutting 2017 w 
" St. 576-1511 



NOVEMBER HAIR SPECIAL!? 
OUR REG $35 ACID PERM $25 
$22 ORGAN IG HENNA SIS 
CALL BOB. 

WAREHOUSE HAIRCUTTERS. 
PHONE 222-MM. 

LESLIE AT DELTA ZETA THANX 
FOR NICE AFTERNOON 
ROGER 

HEY GREATGRANOMA. 
HAPPY 2Ht LET'S 
KEEP THOSE SLIDE 
SHOWS COVIN' 

LUV YA, DEBBIE 

HEY GRANDMA, 
21st AND STILL ACTIVE'. 
LET'S PARTY HARDY IN JAXi 
YOU'LL HAVE A HAFFY ONE- 
f LUV YAI YOUR WILDEST KID 



IMPORTANT 



B SEVEN HILLS 
GENERAL MEETING 



r. Nov. 5. 1978 
Tqwool 

Call Starr Tu:'lor ^ 
for fmrtker information 




,ady sw 



by 9«n 



Hie beginning and the 
With the football team 
itf. the fiKUs of FSU ath 
,pening of the v^omen s 
tosing <rf ^« women s cr* 



The 

i,htUiiio«Poolw4tli«<iii«» 
oaincsvilk. Oft. A sntU 
last year). 

I (hi pMt. Two yCRTS Bgol 

tankers Rftd Uwt yew kwt 
FSU coRch Terry MboI 
not lUMlmitiflUite fkenau 

the Ewet as a chwice to esj 
**BmMi is prlnutfUy a s 
t chaaoe to tee what kind > 
well osr naiii iprtetEn, J( 

dor 

As tbe iwiBiiiicn beg« 
seauM may lie endiiig. tli 
Stturday in AtlaaU his 
Regkm n regioBals. It take* 
advance to the nationals. 



WACISSA 

N( 

Itl 1410 




For more info 



CO-OP 

648 

WE NGHT MFUTj 
KKES 



New Arri 
In 

jHiuny 

Aeorsi 
NeatI 



10 • 9 MON • Si 




SlS^S Lady swimmers open season Saturday 



r LIFE 

s to — — 



GAIL HOi r 
'O SALLY. WE 



THE CELTS 



DING POST T(?E 



le A-ith fh(. 
If 



AT 

purchase 



^ melted ch«d<Ur 

:LASS HUNGRY' 
.■•ere ,n the Union to, 

"wicntt, yoguri 



VLE DOG at bepr bash 
ick and Ian on back 
I ot>ed»«it. Cant keep 
call 444.2lJlif 



DAUSCHAUMO ON 

4450 



ID! Brown & white 
^ urgant-has 
'medication daily 
ktf aTM Call 57MS0S 

It LAROE REWARD! 

IMIX MED SIZE 

IMOSTLY BLK 
ISWERS TO KILO 
tS PK AREA 
1224 1608 

OEN RETRIEVER 
GST SUN 10 12 AT 

IR THE UNION FSU 
|ME GET HER BACK 
HER GOLDEN OR 
FOR INFORMA. 

Id black&tan german 
jiih hair, l yr. old 
Jtriever, female, no 
js tatooed on rlgtit 

S.S. no., must look 
lor found please cai 
222-M92, 385 7520 




;n hills 

LMEETIN(' 
fov. 5. 1978 

• rr Taylor 
information 



by 9«rakl Mttoy 



The beginning and the beginning of the end. 
With the football team enjoying the rewrite of an open 
iau the focus of FSU athletics this weekend shifts to the 
pcning of the women's swimming season, and tentative 
IckttiQg of the women's cross country season. 



i ports 



The women swimmers begin their season Satorday at 

itheUmon IHwi with a doal meet iliiiMt Bfcnmi Cc^k^ ^ 
Gainesville, Ga. A smaD coOefe power (tiikd in tibe natioo 
I ast year), Brenao is a team that has given FSU trouble in 
■4 past. Two years ago they defeated tlK Senun^ 
aokers and last year lost by a slini margin. 
FSU coach Terry Maol, while enqrfiasizing that he wOl 
not underestimate Brenao as he did two years ago, views 
I the meet as a chance to evahiate tiiis year's team. 

"Bfeuau is primarily a sprhit team, and this will give us 
a chance to see what Idnd of speed we have, especially how 
^ eii oar main sprinters, Jeaimie Dowdle and Susie Yates, 
I do." 

A» ^ swimmers begin, the women's cross country 
I season may be ending , though ooach Paul Tonm doubts it. 
Saturday in Atlanta his diarges compete in the AIAW 
Region II regionals. It takes a first or second place fimsh to 

I advance to the nationals. 




FLORIDA flAMBEAU^ Riday. Hommm 3. WB / 15 

STUDENT SPfCIAL : 

• " ■ off on ol Pwts 4 Ubor* 

• Corner ot AAonrea 

2 A Tennessee AMWarll Fore»9»^ Car Repa.r 

? naarMlMrt Front End Altgnnr^ent 

• OMNa4HRS. AC nepair a Sarvica 

• tn-tm ^^^mm^^m 

f B^SBt ^^flfc ■ ^l^i^^Vl Manager 

George Unglawb 




Terry Maul , , ^coach awafts season opener 

Toran, despite the absence of number two runner Rose 
Giampadmo (out with a knee injury), predicts victory. 

'* We're the probable favorites over Alabama and 
Auburn (who the Seminoles defeated earlier), and Ka^y 
Moore (FSU's top runner) is the tndivi&ial favorite. Even 
without Rose we're solid enoui^ to stUl be the best." 





Come see the 
good peo|ile... 

® 

BOY 



Frisch's on the Campus: 
1 775 W€st Tennessee Street 




WACISSA CANOi TRIP 

1ft 14 to iigii up got to go 



PLANT SALE!!! 



"friondly prices" 




Mm\iir.n!itiiii' 



For more info caH 4-6710 or 

238 Union 




CO-OP RECORDS 

WE FIGHT INFUTION WITH THE U>WEST 
PRICES M THE STATE 



New Arrivok Now 
In Stock 

Jimmy Buffet Live 
Aeorsmith Liva 

Donna Summer 
Rush Choka 

HOURS 

10 • 9 MON - SAT OPM SUN 12 • 6 



Westwood 

Location 
Open 
1-6 

Sundays 



Fall Harvest 

20% OFF ALL 

PLANTS!!! 



PLUS -For All Decorating Needs 

• Wicker Baskets • Bamboo Shades • 
• Bedspreads • Posters • Chimes • Pottery • 



'We Make You Feel Good'' 

NOW 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 

DOWiNTOWN — 119 E. CalJ (In the J.C. Pennev Bldg.) 222.739S m s-mo^ 
WEST — Westwood Shopping Center Pensacola St. 575-7800 



Indoor 
Plant 
Specialists 



A FRAME FOR ALL 





Yon earn clearly see 
that Hatcher Opticians 
is THE place to he • 




1219i^ Miecowkee Road 

No AppeiMment Ntttnary 877-0961 




^1 




^1 



It 




11 



fast 

delivefy 
and 

service 





^^^^ 



^^Sjm^mir ^^^^^^^^^^^ 




"j0 ^ 



^^^^^^ 



^i^^^'^ji^i^ jin^i^p fj^di^ i^f^^iiiis^0 ^^^jf^^^iSf 
B <r*»^ ^z*** v 



l^^^W^^JP^^j^W www w 





Florida 



Monday 
NmremMr 61 




Serving 



TallahasfM for 66 yean 



IsStxFwmyT 

Oiris MiOer. writer for NatioMi 
fji i yiptf ^ gmi Ml auth or cf the hit aoHe 
**AiriMi HoMe" wiR ipeak loiqgbt irt 8 
at tiie MuMtage Theatre Ib the Rae Arti 
BnSdiiig al FSU. hffiier wfll diicaaa the 

Sex FttMqr'" AitataioB is free. 



Gubernatorial candidates 

uii in ruiai cteuaie 



MIAMI (UPI) — Democratic nominee 
Robert Graham and GOP nominee Jack 
Kckerd met their final face-to-face televised 
showdown yesterday before tomorrow's 
fciubcrnatorial ballotiflg and told how they 
planned to get money for their fiscal 
programs without raising state taxes. 

Answering questions of a panel 
composed of news reporters from the host 
station (WCKT), The Miami Herald, and 
The Miami News, Eckerd estimated a task 
force of unpaid business volunteers he 
hopes to turn loose in Tallahassee would 
find $500 million in waste within a $6 billion 
state budget. 

Graham said he thought he could easily 
achieve his goal of boosting the state's 



share of school costs without a tax raise 
because he expects a state surplus of as 
much as $250 million from present tax 
rates. 

Each insisted his approach was the best 
means of assuring tax relief for the elderly. 
Eckerd said his proposal for a doubling of 
the $5,000 homestead exemption in 
computing property taxes would be of 
greatest aid. Graham insisted his plan for a 
two-year freeze on property taxes would be 
the most beneficial because it would benefit 
the elderly who reht as well as those who 
own their homes. 

Graham said the Eckerd plan for doubling 
the homestead exemption would be of no 
help to the state's small businesses or 



renters. Eckerd objected to the Graham tax 
freeze on the grounds that the greatest 
beneficiaries would be some of the state's 
biggest property owners. 

Graham fully endt)rsed tax incentives as a 
means of making Florida competitive with 
Georgia and Alabama in the drive for "new 
industry. Eckerd said he would allow 
Panhandle counties to waive ad valorem 
taxes to attract new business providing the 
cost wasn't passed along to property 
taxpayers, and he said tax incentives should 
be only a last resort in the drive for 
industrialization. 



turn to GOVERNOR, page 8 




Bob Graham 




Jack Eckerd 



Inmates get 'addicted' to ninning, meu 



tion 




by jrni cox 

flambMH staff writvr 

Prisoners of D-unit at Tallahassee's 
Federal Correctional Institute scored some 
dope recently that has given them the kind 
of high prison officials hope will enable 
them to cope more effectively on the 
outside. 

The dope is "positive addiction," and the 
high comes from a combination of running 
and transcendental meditation which 
prisoners learned from FSU crimiiiology 
professor Alexander Bassin. 

** Positive addiction," Bassin explained, 
"is simply based on the theory that not all 
habits are bad." Such habits, he said, 
actually "benefit every aspect of one's 
living. They help to make a person able to 
better cope with the stresses and problems 
they face in everyday life." 

When such positive habits include what 
many of the prisoners in the program refer 
to as a "high," the results are bound to be 
auspicious, as indeed they have been. 

Matt DeZee, the program's running 
expert, said, "We started with two or four 
inmates when we began, but towards the 
end of the program we had 34 attending. 

"Everyone is jogging," he added. 
"Whenever these prisoners are released, 
they will be able to easily associate with 
non-criminal groups." 

The group participants receive credit for 
the number of hours they run or meditate 
and 50 hours worth gives the inmate a 
certificate which is the only material 
incentive he receives. 

Most of the inmates involved in the 
project refer to the "high" received while 



running and meditating aa the only 

incentive necessary. 

"It's just a beautiful feeling," one inmate 
explained. "When I run I realize that I can 
accept pain and that I can endure it; it 
changes my outlook on eveiything around 



"When you include meditation," he 
added, "it's sort of like helping your body 
mentally and physically. When I have a 
devious thought I can meditate and convert 
that thought into something positive.'* 

The application of positive addiction in 
prison rehabilitation has been in use for a 
number of years, but the incorporation of 
running and TM is unique to the 
Tallahassee institute. No specific study has 
been made as yet, but Bassin indicated he 
would like to see some research made into 
the rehabilitative effects of the program. 

The only problems some of the inmates 
encountered in the present program was 
difficulty trying to perform TM in the noisy 
prison dorms. 

"It's hard to concentrate on your mai)tra 
with all the clanging and talking that goes 
on in the dorms," one of the inmates said, 
"but there's time in the morning around 
5:30 when 1 find it quiet enough to 
practice.** 

The project is working with the aid of the 
Gulf Winds Track Club, which provides 
shoes for the inmates, and a small grant 
from FSU. 

Inmates involved say the effects of the 
program will definitely help when they 



turn to msON, §mgo8 



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Tht People for 
meeCifig this past 

People will fill tl 
Room 346 Union) 
a line to The P< 

Tlie People an 
mariiiMna law thi 
have esUblishe<i \\ 
Reseaixrh. Also, 
planning a Home 

We would like 
sentenced last wr<| 
grams of mariiu.) )] 

So, those of v« 
jailing of Alan I 
please help The 



BASKETBALL 
buy a season tick* 
$15. Liflf^ one perl 

because there's a i{ 

Florida game ti 
Only tickets issuf> 
the coupon bookit 
NO sales — pleasel 



All previous F loj 
Federal Insured 
National Bank of 
status. Forms musi 
193^ to altew for pj 
the 1979 Summer 



If you would like 
Ralph Nader, stop 



IMPLICATIONS 
and final seminar oj 
tonight at 7:30 p ni 
event is open to tf 

i» 




g r o up off poopio 



The People for RatKmal Marijuana Uws and a Little Justice held an organizational 
meeting this past Thursday and it was a resounding success. Hopes are high that the 
People will fill the Student Union at the next meeting (Thursday Nov 16 9pm 
Room 346 Union). If you can't wait until then to join The People call 644 181 1 or drop 
a line to The People, c/o SC President Neat Friedman, 325 Union, Campus Mail 

The People are cruising full speed ahead towards our goal of passing a rational 
marijuana law through the 1979 f=1orfda Legislature. The People are organized and 
have esubhshed 4 committees: 1) Lobbying, 2) Funding, 3) Public Relations and 4) 
Research. Also, The People are establishing liaison with NORML, and we are 
planning a Homecoming Float and a "Toga for Toker Fund-raising Party " 

We would like to take this opportunity to pay tribute to Alan Lee Odom who was 
sentenced last week to 90 days in the Leon County Jail for Possession of less than 5 
grams of mari|uana. We're with you, Alan! 

So, those of you who would like to help prevent any more tragic events like the 
jailing of Alan Lee Odom (many of you probably have your own horror stories), 
please help The People for RatkNial Marijuana Laws and a Little Justice. 

■itotball ti€kt»t 

BASKETBALL SEASON TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT TULLY GYM - You can 
buy a season ticket which includes 11 games for only $12. Cuest season tickets are 
$15. Limit one per student. A Current I. D. card is required for purchase. Hurry, 
because there's a limited tiwnber m^aikble. 

Florida game tickets will be restricted to students who purchased season tickets. 
Only tickets issued wiil be in exchange for coupons. Do not tear the coupons out of 
the coupon booklet because no ticket will be exchanged for one that is. There will be 
NO sales — please plan accordingly. 



All previous Florida Insured Student Loan borrowers who are now eligible for the 
Federal Insured Student Loan Renewal Program through the Southeast First 
National Bank of Miami must apply before Nov. 22, 1978 to retain their eligibility 
status. Forms must be submitted to the Financial Aid Office no later than Nov. 10, 
1978 to allow for processing time. Students who have not applied but plan to attend 
the 1979 Summer Quarter must also meet the Nov. 22, 1978 deadline. 

Nader^s Research Bcuik 

It vou would like to read the Public Scholars Research Bank, a book left at FSU by 
Ralph Nader, stop by room 327 of the Union. 

TIm ClMwrcli QBcl li p in o >e Jimilify 

IMPLICATIONS OF A CULTURALLY ACCEPTED CAY LIFESTYLE - The fourth 
and final seminar on the theme 'The Church and Homosexuality'' will be held 
tonight at 7:30 p.m. at United Ministries Center (across from Bill's Bookstore). This 
event is open to the public. 



Office of CoiMwicntio— 




WHY 



is 




S1ART 
ALR 





AOXXiD? 




Drivel 






Smoking is harmful 
to your baby s health. 
Quit for both of you. 
For help call your 
Amencan Carxser Society. 





llkeflo 



CaU 




^Bwt your honor, 
bo ratioMri'' 





Help yourself by helping others by involving yourself m volunteer work in the 
community. While doing so, you can gain practical experience in your field of study 
and help others greatly at the same time So now you want to know how you can find 
out more about the different volunteer opportunities in Tallahassee Well, come by 
Rm. 338 Union and you'll find the Volunteer Opportunities Center Awaiting you 
there will be trained staff to help you find the volunteer placement which fits you and 
your needs best. 

Currently we have special requests which include: a reader for a Nigerian student 
with low vision who has had his funds cut off by his government and can no longer 
afford a paid reader; tutors are needed at Disc Village drug rehabilitation program 
and along with these requests we have volunteer opportunities in 85 different 
agencies in the Tallahassee area. Help yourself by Helping others! Come by Rm 338 
Union or call 644-6410 and v\e'll be more than happy to serve you. 



Special thanks from E A G. to Bernie Windhamof Apalachee Recycling Center for 
his informative and enjoyable talk on reclamation. We hope to facilitate passage of 
Bottle Bill Legislation and in the creation of a public awareness reclamation program 

on campus and in town. 

Wednesday night's meeting at 7:30 in Room 352 Union, will host a speaker on 
Whales and a film to bring more interest to the Whale Movement in. Tallahassee. 
Hey, bikepath people - don't give up! Volunteers are needed to plan presentations 
to local PTA's and organizations on the great need for Tallahassee bike paths. Please 
come to our meeting Wednesday to discuss plans with other interested people. 

For more information on E A G. call either the Student Consumer Union office 
(days, 644-1811 J or Leslie Wagenheim (222-9801). 



There's a pollworkers meeting tonight at 7:30 in Room 240 Union. Please bring 
your time sheet with you Call if you can't make it to the meeting. 

Run-off elections will be held this Wednesday, Nov. 8 from 8:30a.m. - 7 p m. Your 
validated I .D. card is required to vote. Polling locations include FAB, Law School, 
Music Building, Williams, Bellamy, Library, Moore, the Post Office, Keen Plaza, 
and the Education Building. 

Expense statements are due by Tuesday, Nov. 14 at 4 p.m. Fines will be disbursed 
and/or certificates of election held back if statement is not submitted. 
. Campaigning will not be allowed 50 ft. within the polling places. NO posters, 
campaign literature, or vote soficiting allowed. Fines will be assessed if there are any 
violations. 



BntOFtoiimioHt 



CEO presents "Getaway Friday" November 10, 1978. We've chartered a bus and 
we're taking you away for a day - to beautiful St. George's Island, just two hours 
south of Tallahassee There'll be volleyball, frisbee, etc. (which we'll supply), and 
lots of beer and munchies (which you'll supply). The fee of $5 which includes round 
, trip transportation, use of the sports equipment, and the beach. The rest is up to you t 
So grab your friend, cooler, and camera, and get away for a day! ! ? Since thet^are 
no classes (Veteran s Day), wouldn't you rather be at the bfach? Call 644-3840 amd 
make your reservations by Wednesday, Nov. 8 at 5 p.m. (All plans sut^ to 
[change ) 

CEO IS sponsoring the highly acclaimed saga "Roots" in four parts, November 6-9 
jfrom 7 to 10 p m in Room 201 Diffenbaugh. If you missed this great movie, this is a 
unique opportunity to see it in its entirety. And if you've seen it before, you know 
how good It is - treat yourself to a second time. Admission is free. Coming soon 

KING KONG 

CEO thanks all those who contributed to making Disco Night the success that it 
Iwas, especially LPO, Record Bar, Susie's, WooIco, Pizza Inn, Men's Room II, and 
Saga — we couldn't have done it without you! 



Office of 




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Reynold| 
suppor 



by d( 

fUi 

Anit 1 H- ' Stnal 

/.skew, h<ifh guht-rna 
Jack Eckt ril and ti> 
arc in fav >r it u. 
h appeM& that the 

The results of t 
Florida newspapers 
ooosthution revision 2 
basts of sex. by a wid 

A St. Petenburg T 
with other newspape 
contacted in favor of 
percent opposed. A 
percent margin for th 

Eeynolds, normally 
recorded a radio com 
request d the Florida 

Id the commercial 
stations across the sta 
publicaily tnvoh^ed in 
equal rights, we all h 

Reynolds says that 
problem because "t 
constitution forgot 
discrimination." 

"Don't be fooled 
something to do with 
says the radio ad. "h 
you lato voting for thei 
own economic interest 

Tlie atar of "Delive 
Hollywood's most sou 
FSU in the late SOs. 
football team. Reyn( 
weeks ago to oondu 
stmleots. 



1^^ 

AUTIJj 




FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Mondav Novprr^hp- 6 ^ 978 ' 5 




Reynolds' radio ad 
supports equcd rights 



by dennis mulquMn 

flambeau staff writer 

Anita Biyant, Senate President Designate Phil Lewis, 
and other icey legislators are against it; Gov. Reuben 
/skew, both gubernatorial candidates Bob Graham and 
Jack Eckerd, and FSU's super alumnus, Bert Reyiu^ds, 
are in favor of it. 

It appears that the ayes have it. 

The results of twp separate polls conducted by 
Florida newspapers show Floridians in favor in 
constitution revision 2, which bans discrimination on the 
basis of sex, by a wide margin. 

A St. Petersburg Times poll, conducted in conjuction 
with other newspapers, reported 52 percent of those 
contacted in favor of the so-called "mini-ERA," with 33 
percent opposed. A Miami Herald poll cited a 63 to 27 
percent margin for those supporting the measure. 

Reynolds, normally reticent on political matters, has 
recorded a radio commercial in favor of revision 2 at the 
request of the Florida League of Women Voters. 

In the commercial, which is being played on radio 
stations across the state, Reynolds says, "Fve never been 
publically involved in politics, but when its on the issue of 
equal rights, we all have to get involved." 

Reynolds says that all Floridians have an equal rights 
problem because **the lawyers who drafted our new 
constitution forgot to protect us against sex 
discrimination." 

"Don't be fooled by people who teU you this has 
something to do with the gay liberation or bathrooms/' 
says the radio ad. "It doesn't. They just want to confuse 
you into voting for their economic interests instead of yonr 
own economic interest." 

The star of "Deliverance" and **Hooper" and one of 
Hollywood's most sought-after talents, Reynolds attended 
FSU in the late 50s, and was a defensive back on the 
football team. Reynolds returned to Tallahassee four 
weeks ago to conduct a one-day workshop for theatre 
students. 




AUTUIHN CRAFTS 
FAIR 

Nevmber 1 1 
19am - 4 pM 

llafoa 

Courtyard 

( Ballrooms in cam of rain) 

Register: 

Oet. 10 
I Rai 238 
1 FSU IlidM 




LPO 

|FAU HiHI SBMbI 
^TONIGHTI- 




7:30 P.M. 




Acadetny 

Awatxl 

Winner! 



Laurence OLIVIER 
Joan FONTAINE 

Geofye SANDERS 
Judith ANDERSON 



9:30 ?M. 



S.G. Lecture Series presents TONIGHT; 

diriis 9Iillcr 



^^^^^^^^ 



Author 



«f .L^nWAL H^UfV 



■n 
O 



& Writer for tlie 



UkMB—M 



*" 8 P JN* Moinstoge Aud. The Fine Arts BuiMing 
§ P r og w co t p— t o f d kf CPE 4 iPO 

COMMUNICATIONS 




Mvl^kbdenwUhBlM£ Maguey pvMifmtke^ 



Since 1795 weVe gathered our 



Blue Mojguey s for Cuervo Gold 
the gentle wa)4 

Itf^the old way. And still 
the best. 

At Cuervo we know that there is only one way to mxike 
Ciiervo Gold perfect The way we've been doing it for nurre 
than 180 years. 

That's why people still nurture our fields of Blue 
Mojguey plants. And why mules are still used to bring 
these precious plants to our distillery. Fbr tradition is still 
the nwst important ingredient in Cuervo Gold. 

This is what makes Cuervo Gold truly special, ^eat, 
on the rocks, tuith a splash of soda, inaperfect Sunrise or 
Margarita, Cv£rvo Gold wul bring you back to a time token 
quality ruled the world. 

Cuer va The Gold standard since 1795. 

CUERVO ESPECIAL^ TEQUIU. 80 PROOF IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY C 1978><EUBLEIN. INC.. HARTFORD. CJOmt 




; 11 



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jjiik JUL 




The Fl ^mhft^^^ s endorsements 

Constitution revision 

Florida voters lake to the polls tomorrow to record their 
preferences on any number of political candidates. In 
addition, Floridians will have the opportunity to cast their 
votes either for or agaiiist nine proposed revisioiis to the 
state coastitBtion. Here are The Flambeaii revision 
eadorsements: 

•Revision 1 sounds okay to us. A smorgasboard of 
changes in 10 of the 12 articles in the current constitution, 
we can't say we lilie all the dishes served. However, 
nobody's af^tite will be completely satiated by this one, 
aad there are enough vital nutrients offered in which the 
present constitBtion is kddng ttmt we'll give it our vote. 

•The ••raini-ERA." the "State Equal Rights 
Amendment," whatever we want to call it, revision 2 must 
be put in the constitution. The proposal simply would 
revise that hallowed document to inside a ban on 
discrimination on account of sex. 

/ •Revision 3 mcms reapportfoftment of the state into 
single-member legislative districts and a commission to 
establish them. This one we've needed for a while and can 
count on your vote. 

•Revision 4 would abolish the Cabinet system in toto. 
We got robbed by the Commission of an effective 
compromise that would have streamlined the Cabinet and 
handed his instead. It sitiells bad — too much power for 
the Governor. We say can it. 

•If revision 5 is adopted, we'll have an appointed Public 
Service Commission. That's the agency which regulates 
utilities, trucking and the like, and no way do we need 
that. With folks like Jim Smith on the rise in state politics, 
the more contrd we keep in the hands of the people, the 
less our power is usurped by big business. 

•Revision 6 would allow the governor to select circuit 
and county judges from a list prepared by a special 
nominating commission, yet ever after, judges would be 
required to run against their record every six years. If the 
people don't want them, out they go to be replaced by 
siMneone better (theoretically). No great shakes to us, 
really — it seems like judges serve for life now anyway. 
Maybe change for the sake of change here would do a little 
good. 

•Tax breaks for big business we do not need, and that is 
one of the main thrusts of revision 7, sugar-coated with the 
sweet goo of tax breaks for homeowners. The proposals 
are too mixed and a little too vague; we don't want 'em in 
our constitution. 

•It sounds good in theory — a full time board of 
education, instead of the Florida Cabinet, which serves as 
the board of education, but in reality is a rubberstamp for 
Ralph Turlington — but revision 8, too, is vague, and we 
fear it would take too much power away from the people of 
the state and put it into the hands of an appointed few. 

Additionally, the Board of Regents would maintain its 
authority over higher ed, splitting the responsibilities in 
the education system, and putting two constitiHioBaHy 
empowered bodies and anodier layer of bureaucracy 
between the people and the way their education is 
determined. Revision 8 we would prefer to live without. 

•The forces clashing over revision 9 which would 
legalize casino gambling along Florida's Gold Coast are 
both repugnant. Our position, simply. Is if the 

people want to gamble, let them gamble — the 
consequences are theirs. 

Neither organized nor disorganized crime is going to get 
any worse in the state because of it. 




P138U28U5 0 ^ 




P13Sll28li50 





No minority political party 



Slavery Days 



by lucius gantt 

flambMv columnist 

How long (like Richard Pry or 
says), will this bullshit go on? 
HOW LONG? 

Tomorrow is election day and 
once again, like always, black 
people w »naiag. . .for theur 
lives. 

Unfortunately, the situaticm 
here in Florida is no better for its 
black citizens, than the political 
situation was 100 years ago. 

Black people are still powerless 
and their current powerlessness 
exists in spite of their donuafttiii^ 
influence at the ballot box. 

I know even before the first 
vote is cast that black people are 
going to vote Democratic, that 
more Democrats will be elected 
than Republicans, and when they 
lake office, that Democrats won't 
do a damn thing for black citizei» 
unless they are forced to. 

I believe, like Malo^ X 
believed, that a vote for a 
Democrat is nothing but a vote for 
a Dixiecrat. 

I know all of my friends who 
support Bob Graham publicly and 
those who support him "in the 
closet'* don't like lor me to say 
that but it's true. 

Take Gov. Reubin Askew for 
example. After all the votes 
blacks gave him, he feels he 
should neglect high black 
unemployment, ii^ustice in the 
court systems, segregation in the 
schools and colleges, aad otber 
areas of importance to as 
devote all of his time to trying to 
stop casino gambling. 

Why ate Askew and odKr 
Democrats AGAINST casino 
gambling and FOR horse radi^ 
dog racing and jai alai? How can 
they be against gambling in the 
casinos and for btngo ni die 
church? 



Gambling is gambling just like 
pregnant is pregnant. Askew 
can't stop gambling just like he 
can't stop prostitution. Gamblii^ 
has to be stof^ied by chaogiiig 
minds, not lines. . .is tlie state 
constitution. 

So, in other wofds, we elect 
mostly Democrats. We pat them 
first and they put us last. 

If aU the blacks and Latim aad 
women stayed at home to morr o w, 
Graham woold be scared as hdi. 
He'd be scared, because the 
whites in Florida are divided. Bat 
the non-white block vote can send 
"the CTMker" to die govenor's 
mansioa or Imk^ to Us maid hi 
Miami Lakes. 

The DemocnUs and Flofida's 
Democratic state 
have failed us. If the 
has not £uled as, why are tte 
preachers always parading up to 
the capitol and dty hai IdHif 
about. "We Shafl Oveicomer^ 

Any time Mack people support 
politicians who only show ap la 
the black comnmnity to hay some 
votes aad cop sonie dope, they 
are crazy. Any time Macks 
condnue to support a party that 
liaa historicaBy and tiadlth»a% 
lied to diem, they are msaim. 
any dme Mack people support a 
party. Democratic or Repubfican, 
that is compoaed of tadits, 
sensts and capitaliili, those 
Mack people are lools. in additioB 
to being foob, diey tte tiaiton to 



• 4 



_ run op 

to me and say I support 
Wayne Mhaoa because he has 
lived with bUchs in the 
pa^HuuHe. HeB, Mm a racist 
pcapecdve, die whole state of 
Fkuida Is die panhauili. They'll 
fire you §nm your job. jai you 
•fthout evIAeaoe aud rape your 
fust as ^uick m Marianna 



as they will in Clearwater. 

Black people in Florida have to 
understand. You ctn't be 
Democrats or Republicans, k 
order to be a Democrat or i 
Republican, you have to be ar 
American. If we were Aroericaos 
we'd have the rights, privilege^ 
and protection of an Americai. 

DOT't sit around in a stae 
where Graham and Jack Eckerd 
both say that blacks and poor 
people who kill people should get 
the electric chair and whites ml 
rich people who kill people ge 
Biscayne Bay. If Florida is for tie 
death penalty, don't call yousetf 
a Florldiaa. 

Flofidian women don't ge 
raped aad have the grand jar> al 
It child abuse. Floridiin studeo 
affairs programs at sute 
universities don't get tbeir 
budgets cut by 60 per ceot 
Merchants and mercenaries cti't 
murdn Floridisns and get awiy 

with it. 

We don't catch hcD becmse *e 
support Gndmm or Eckerd We 
aUch heO because we're bUd. 
The Democradc and Republicifl 
pmities weie not designed to 
increase or enhance bUd 
poiitkal power. They were 
desigaed to mamtaia hnpeia^ 



Btack volm should not sof^ 
any candidate or party that do» 
aot support diem. Blacks shou^ 
demaod diat Graham aad Eckenl 
purchase signed, notarized adsui 
major papers diat spell out 
exactly what diey plan to do. B 
they plan to appoint Wacis » 
high positions diey should hst 
those jobs in die ads. we don ( 

have a contract, wc'fl ^^r^ 
able to hold diem to Wf 
promises. ^ 
Anyway, if you stiB fed tm 
there is a difference behit» 
Eckerd the wolf and ^^''^^'^ 
fox. go ahead and vote, 
because of the polidcs surrou^ 
ing mv part-time job with 1 
Washington Post, I * ^ 
remind you that die only 
cracker is a Graham cracker. - 




4 



IT 

Genl 
Stui 



X., ^ 



Yes, dangerous is tke word. Perhaps if yoa den't spend tlie 
five ndnntes it talLes to vete today, yonr eldlflren wont lie 
, ; alile to vote at all tomorrow. Onr American iustory fiooits 
liave told ns repeatedly tliat voting is tlie very 

cornerstone of our American f r<N^dom. So why then are 
so many young people not voting? We should realize tliat 
by abandoning our political voice, we are apathetically 
clawing at the very foundation of our freedom. 

The foundation of freedom - it's damned important ! 
Periiaps too important to appriH^iate untU it's gone, 
until it's too late. Until they tal^e away our right to vote. 
Not to decide, is to decide. 
To not vote is a really dangerous dcN^ision . . . 

FREEDOM'S FOUNDATION 



9 



IT'S D AimVED IMPORTANT! 

General elections are Tuesday, IVovember 7 
Student Government elections; are Wednesday 



VOTE! 



Office of Communicatioos 



) 



t 



i 

r 





HEW will offer Leon County help 
in cutting minority suspension rate 






Black cauoien have no 
greater tendeiicy to 
misbehave than white 
children firom the same 
social and economic 
class, says Dr. Charles 
BillimB, head of tibe 
FSU Center for Urban 
i Minorit} Problaps 




JIMMY CRO. 
IS ALIVE AND 

WELL AT 
S 



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5754701 



J I// IT 

HUCO'S 
rni A SIT. 



EBKr^nc'* Sc!>3oi Aid A:* 




other cosatj scteib,** Miniyi 



Dr. Claries Mfags. had ai Ikt 
FSL' prujec:, was called to 
WiihiagfiiM. D.C. letcMili K> lesdff 
oe its mctkods xmd cffcuit eaess- 

Hjs "Projeci Coscers** th selected 
LeoB Canty scboois is 2"cni|iciiig co 

A Uack 



His app fo i cfc «es special classes 

for :?arenrs a-d eachers. held last 
s;_--z- Pire-'s ire trailed in 
sc'*»j^ ".'.e-s asc asked to se'-T 
ihetr :~:.ir^z z . ."-^cne*' :-k. and 
teachers attead sessio-ns oa 
dassrooa fccTptisc mc i-' xis. 

BiiliDgs. who heads the FSU 
Cemter f jt Urban aod Mmoriiy 
said he beheves Macfc 



I \>» en » aad 



BUI 



■arcrr of the Sp-e::!,'. 
C .':.-r""i r^'T-enm, said ir-e s-r^-t-i'ed 
.i<.j»j'i. .1,. i ' 1 '.i do wot ii-cc.c*5...i-a,riH" 
have ifisprt^iT'Knafefjr hi^ mmon- 
tr wspensi'Tr '^'e-s Tbose viucb 
eke: pi- I'li'.e itixiic so 
addftkr^ - t . aad are asked mx 
to creaLc :>p*=:-ul or alfcniaT^'e 
classes to segre^te probicm 



acts in i^ack or 

he said, 
n^s also said a clearer 



CO-OP 
BOOKS 



THE LONG CHAIN 



7« .:4;jprssai«3fi 



~<»:a such ai tht 



i BbcH to he 

K. 1 

He 



a whiie 



to 



sospensiofi raoo yet^ as 
prografii * as iriipieflieaied 6ifly 



'^B«t in 



" he 

ago reckless ey ebaffiag was a 

areas." 

us a 5-3 said he fears the high 
siispeosicm figures cootri- 
to crime atnoog young blacks by 

-'^er- mi on the s:ree:s.** 



MON. NOV. Uk 7:30 PJM. 
120 CAHMTAT 



Governor 



~ . E AN AF^IR 
AT RII CO'S 

JAZZ - BY THE 
"SOUND AFFAIR- 



AVAIUUi AT CMP lOOXSTORI 

PH)PiES OEMOOUa 

COMMuiu»t^PI|IIT Of IMMA 
(MAJUUST) 




NY pa] 

Daily H€««» ^ 
iiew9|M4^ 
stfeen lod^y ^ 

The two wonitag I 
newspaper ftfike if 
agree fn««t» ^^^^ 
pgperlHUMUi^* 

The pacts cap| 

m AMEBICAN 

grou(M» for its free s 
can cafi 222 5481 f 

r. Kuirr criKi 

StTvico ti)r tfic Blin 
of C i»ngress, will s 
handicapi>ed tonigh 
hascmcni. His talk 
Library Science. 

DR. DIANNE HA 
and Person C omm 
I uncheon scries at • 
Mcndian Rd.. tomo 
call M4 .1801 for a 

TONY NINOS ot I 
Hotels will not add 
meeting has been c 
on Monday. Nov. 1 J 

Ml artof pt Hcy : Th« Fl«f 
tfiW not print noticM of 

day and iflinioan •« 

notice will bo nm ol 
Noticm win not b« taken 
•t FSU BOK y-TOOl or tf«Hi 
Avo. by 1 p m. aw day bi 
day, time, place, cost, it 
itams aro subiect to »ta» 



Weal 



Skies will conltn 
cloudy tomorrow 
early nitu i .-ig fog is] 
with highs near HO 
around 10 m.p.h "i 





Exn 

mm 



Toulout#-L«i 

Rothko 
Rousseau 
KiM, Van G< 



litigton 
Frafikanthal< 
Qaugin 
Corot 
Dali 
Picasso 
Ranolf 



Data: ExK 
TIfiia: 10-5 



RORIDA FLAMBEAU 



NY paper strike ends 

NFW YORK (UPI) — The New York Times and The 
Uiiih N( ws. idled by a strike that left 10,000 of the city's 
r , Aspaper employees out of work, prepared to hit the 
s r( { ts UK\a\ with their first editions in 88 days. 

7hc two morning papers — shut by the third longest 
oewspapcr strike in the city's history — wrapped up 
agreements over the weekend with mackyy^^, 
paperhandlcrs. stereotypers and mechanics. ^^^^ 
The pacts capped a week of intensive negotiations 

In Brief 

THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY is now fonniog 
groups for its free stop-smoking clinic. Interested persons 
can call 222-5481 for information. 

F. KURT CYLKE, director of the National Library 
Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, Library 
f Congress, will speak on library service for t^ie blind and 
handicapped tonight at 7 in Room 9 Strozier Library 
basement. His talk is spoosofed by the FSU School of 
Library Science. 

DR. DIANNE HARRISON will speak on "Assertivettess 
and Person Communication" as part of the Brown Bag 
Luncheon series at the Bfokaw-McDougall House, 329 N. 
Meridian Rd., tomorrow at flooD. Interested persons can 
call 644-3801 for a free reservation. 

TONY NINOS of the Flonda Division of Restaurant and 
Hotels will not address the Society of Hosts today. The 
meeting has been cancelled and the society will meet next 
on Monday, Nov. 13, in the Statler Dining Room at 7 p.m. 

M Brtoff pt W cy: Tlw Ftimbou In Brief Mcttan, tmemim or fiinitid space, 

doei not print notices of regular meetings of membership groups. Unless 
pre-registration is required, morning events will be announced tt>e previous 
day and afternoon and evening events ttte same day as tt>ey occur. Only one 
notice will be run of eacit event, and ail events must be open to ttte public. 
Notices will not be taken by telephone, tHJt must be ntailed to Ttte Flambeau 
at FSU Box U-7001 or delivered to ttie Flambeau office at 204 N. Woodward 
Ave. by 1 p.m. tlie day before they are due to run. All notices should include 
day, Hmaf plaoa« coat* if any* aral a contact numbar far Tha Plambaau. All 
items are aiMiiacf ta i 



() 




Skies will continue fair through today, becoming partly 
cloudy tomorrow with a slight chance of showers. Some 
early morning fog is likely. Lows tonight will be around 50, 
with highs near 80. Winds will be from the southeast 
around 10 m.p.h. today. 




UNITED OFFER 

Exhibition and Sale of 

FINE ART REPRODUmOlVS 

Monet \ It J 



Rothko 
Rousseau 
Klee, Van Gogh 
Degas 
Vermeer 
Remington 
Frankei 
Qaugin 
Corot 
Dali 
Picasso 
Renoir 
Wyeth 

Ijocation: FSU Union Courtyard 

Bad weather — 2nd floor Union 

Date: Extended Men. & Tuee. Mov. 6-7 

Time: 10-5 p.m. 

by LPO 

priced at '^'^ <»nv *^ for 50 



dunng which the dailies also reached accord with 1^ 
striking printing pressmen, whose Aug. 9 strike shut doi*n 
The Times. News and the city's oiay afteraocMi daily. The 
New York Post. 

The last stumbling block to the resumptioo of 
publication was removed yesterday when the Newsp^ier 
Guild, representing editorial and clerical employees, took 
down a picket line it had set up at The Times the night 
before. The Guild agreed to return to work despite the fMutt 
that it did not have a contact agreement with the paper. 

Newspaper workers returned to The Tinm and News 
after their union leaders iastnu^ them to report for their 
regular shifts. 



V 



A*' 




EARNOVER^650AMONTH 
RIGHT THROUGH YOUR 

iMiNIOR YEAR. 



If you're a junior or a senior majoring in math, physics or 
engineering, the Navy has a i»t)gram you diould know about. 

It's called the Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate- 
Collegiate Program (NUPOC-C for short) and if you qualify, 
you can earn as much as $650 a month right throu^ your 
senior year. Then after 16 weeks of Officer Candidate Schoolt 
you'll receive em additional year of advanced technical 
ediKation. Hiis would cost you tiiousands in a civilian sdiool, 
but in the Navy, we pay you. And at the end of the year of 
training, you'll receive a $3,000 cash bonus. 



than 



igs and only 



one of every six applicants will be selected. But if you make 
it, you'll have qualified for an elite engineering training 



isilnlity, 



{MTOgram. With unequaled hands-on rc 
salary in four years, and gilt-edged qualifications for jobs 
in private industry should you decide to leave the Navy 
later. ( J^ut we don't think you'll want to. ) 

Ask your placement officer to set up an interview with a 
Navy representative when he visits the campus 
or contact your Navy representative at 904-396-3822 (collect). 
If you prefer, send your r6sum6 to the Navy Nuclear Officer 
Program, Code 312-B537, 4015 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, 
Va. 22203, and a Navy representative will contact you directly. 
The NUPOC-Coll^ate Program. It can do more tiian help 
youfinishcoll^: it can lead to an exciting career opportunity. 



NAVYOFFKBL 
trS NOT JUST A JOB, ITS AN AOVENIURL 



71» 
I 



0 



i ) 



^ 

is. I 




Children's rights a complex issue 



(fie at the haods of d^ir parents than 



by aay otfwr event or disease." child 
^>ose expert Lomaae Clancy told a 
st»tied aodieiice at last week's 
Conference on the Rights of Children 
held at Trinity Methodist Church. 

The two-day oofloqotam, oo-^kmi- 
sored by FSU's Department of Home 
and Famiy iMe aad the Florida 
Endowment for the Humanities, 
attracted about 50 peri o as from 
varions fields concerned with 
children's rights. 

Some conferees itmaati 
lor legislative action to 
chfldren equal legal footing with 
adults. Clancy pointed out, for 
instance, that even though cases of 
child abuse are more often noted and 
feported by friends and neighbors 
than they used to be, and even though 
the commanity often does step in to 
protect a child whose parents aie 
uafit. the child still suffers a legal 
disadvantage compared to the adults 
aroood him. 

*'it is the parents who have a 
problem," she said. **M it is the 
child who it reaufved from frunUiar 
surroundings and seat to a strange 
place to live. He thinks *If they're the 
ones who did something bad, why am I 
being punished?' And in the court, he 
must wonder why everyone has an 
attorney but him." 

A number of conferees agreed. 

"Rights go unrecognized." con- 
cluded one coaference workshop 




adolts: the other says th^ chflchea, 
being esseniiaSy krespoasaiie. have 
vtrtaaOy BO rig^tts." 

At the Friday hncheoD which closed 
the coafeteace. wcll-kaown 
childrea's nghts activist Feshbacfc of 
tfie Ihuvenity of Caifornia irt Los 
Angeles listed some of the ooneeras of 
t|ie as oveiicat : legal rep 



Dr. Noma Feshback 

. . .keynote conference speaker 
urgm/ research on children's 

report, "until they are legalized." 

Other workshops, though, focused 
on psychological or moral issues in the 
fledgling children's rights movement. 
Some advocated a general "moral 
re-education" of adults and "moral 
education" of children; others saw 
team cooperation among social 
service agencies as paramount. 

•The issues are intricate, the 
emotions generated frequently unpre- 
dictable," cautioned keynote speaker 
Dr. Norma Feshback, "because how 
we think about children is related to 
intimate feelings about ourselves." 

•*We must find a meeting of 
minds," pleaded another conferee, 
''between two extreme and essentially 
irreconcilable perspectives. One holds 
that children shoul d have all the rights 



PGP absorbed through skin, 
says discharged Navy officer 



(ZNS) In what may be the first known case of PCP 
iatozication through the skin, a U.S. Na^ lieutenant who 
was discharged from the military for drug use is appealing 
the discharge on the grounds that he was contaminated 
with PCP after the substance was mysteriously s|HUed oo 
his suitcase during a commercial airline flight. 

PCP — otherwise known as "Angel Dust" — is a 
powerful animal tranquilizer. 

Ll. Peter Chmelier reportedly became ill two days after 
he made a commercial jetliner flight from San Diego to 
Pensacola, Fla. When Chmelier picked up his suitcase 
from the baggage claim area at the airport, he reportedly 
noticed a stioog-saidfiag lic|ttid ^ patted across 
suitcase. 

Two days later when Chmelier became disoriented and 
violent. Navy doctors diagnosed him as schizophrenic. 
Further tests revealed, however, that die Navy flier had 
PCP in his system. He was subsequently stamped as a 
drug abuser and discharged from the Naw. 



ezperimeals, chid abase*, corporal 
puanhmeat, consumer nghts, televi- 
sion programming, castocfy tssoes, 
fioster home care, adoption pofides, 
ihagnostic labefiag aad child caie 
services, to name but a few. 

**The issues are too complicated," 
she maintained, "to be served by any 
ample needs/rights or conservative/ 
liberal dichotomy . . . We need a 
framework to help us disentangle 
them." 

Feshback urged further researach 
into the comprehensive levels of 
children to find out at what age they 
can handle some of the rights 
children's advocates wish to grant 
them. Should a nine-year-old be able 
to legally divorce his parents? Does a 
child accused of a "juvenile crime" — 
such as running away from home — 
have a right to a hearing and to his 
own legal counsel? Should children be 
allowed access to contraceptives? Is a 
child capable of choosing or rejecting 
medical treatment? 

One social worker shook her head 
perplexedly as she left the conference. 

** We don t seem to be very focussed 
yet." she said. Then she added, "But 
we sure do have a lot to think about. ' ' I 



Rm. 314 University Union 
644-5744 
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 



Moras 
hivkatioiis Brochures 
Posters Pamphlets 
Cnids Newflietten 
Fhers Books 
Booklets Bulletins 



AMERICAIi . 
OUKEBSOCIETY % 

This space comribuied by the publisher 



'j; - '1(1 a 



ninq with 



RICCO'S 



me, at 



o Bar 



UN DA 





MVw nw 

Products 




DOWNTOWN GULF 

STUDENT SPECIAL 
10% off on al Ports & Labor: 



BKYCUS 

■ra^i^iM by Raleigh. 

Rampar. Ross, A-0 



Corner of Monro* 
ft TomiMSM 
OrCNMNIIS. 



All Work 




iMiAMfticM: 




Foroign Car Repair 

Front End Alignment 
AC Repair & Service 



Monaser: 
Gaorge Unglaub 



• 
a 
a 
• 

a 



MOPEDS 



by Puch 
Moto 



and 



moped & bicydt work done 
on a0 modeis and makms 



210 W. College 

Timberfane Shops 
On The Square 



HAlRCUnERS INC 

GRAND OPENING SPECIAL 
Perms R«9. 35«> 25~ 
Henna Reg. ir^ iio^y 1500 

hhni bk. let ifTt 
1 Hoiraits $7* WMK-INS WELCoiiin 

Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m. — 8 p.m. 
Saturday 9 a.m. ~ 4 

Wtfl Tamiassset"§S^ \^^^-660^/c*S 



by 



Rkb Scncsac 
couoscUng slcohi.h 
collect*^ beer cans 
Scocsac* s ^ 
gnOoMie assistani 
counseling. Hcalt 
FSU. has about 80 
largest aillf*tMitm> 1 
featuring such ima 
Count. Cloud NiiR 
covered with di 
Washington crossi 
yovng woman in v 
Scnesac began h 
ago, shortly afit r \ 

•*| had alv^ass 
he said. and 
everywhere I 
and sucked them 
conversation pie^^ 
there were nation a 
§0i beer can cv)ll 
member of a c«uipl 
Collectors of Am 
Maverick Beer C a 
Xhc o^llection 
' Hiiee walls of Scm 
few shelves in the 
ftill of '•repeats ' 
alphabetical orde 
side, American or 
*it*s the only v 
laid. 'Tm compu 
The gem of his 
cone top. valued 
fl eOO cans, he < 
$1,200. and more 
separately. 

Some of the m 
niarket today are 
^nch top, worth 
Purple Cow; Soul 
nd a 007 series 
p ff can, Senesac 

••Wlien beer 
said, "brewers di 
^y it in cans. T 
iiofie tops so thi 
ordinary bottle 
•witched to flat 
for conven 
but t 

liie colors on s 
vivid, though. 

One of Senesa 
of the most not 
aw coUectors, 
wMch features a 
the can. It was s 
|ocfc^ as a joke 



The "Horlache 
was bought for 
It's the brand of 
1 was a kid. and 
on it and giving 
He has beer 
United Sutes. 
Alaska and Prii 
such countries 
Scotland. M» 
Canada, Hollar 
ArgentiM. Puc 

Africa. 
Many comp^ 

of cans, like 

series and E 

species set. 

ah 




Beer can collection is his decor 



aomOA FLAMBEAU Mond^r. Hamnim 8^ 18W / " 



ixmi TO 

SPEED READ 



by evelyn beck 

flamb««u writer 

K-.h Scnesac spends his working hours 
counseling alcoholics. In his spare time, he 
collects beer cans. 

Scnesac. a doctoral candidate and 
graduate assistant in the department of 
counseling, health and rehabilitation at 
FSU. has about 80 beer cans, one of the two 
largest collections in Tallahassee. The cans, 
featuring such imaginative names as Polish 
( ount. Cloud Nine and Hop 'n Gator, are 
covered with designs ranging from 
Washington crossing the Delaware to a 
voung woman in various stages of undress. 

Senesac began his hobby about four years 
ago, shortly after his marriage. 

"I had always done a lot of travelling," 
he said, "and tasted different brews 
everywhere I went. I kept some of the cans 
and stacked them in the living room as a 
conversation piece. Then I discovered that 
there were national organizations and clubs 
for beer can collecting, so I became a 
member of a couple of them, the Beer Can 
Collectors of America (BCCA) and the 
Maverick Beer Can Collectors (MBCC). 

The collection rests on shelves lining 
l\iree walls of Senesac' s den, along with a 
tew shelves in the dining room and a closet 
full of "repeats." The cans are stacked in 
alphabetical order, foreign brands on one 
side, American on the other. 

"It's the only way I can find them," he 
said. "I'm compulsive anyway." 

The gem of his collection is a 1937 Schlitz 
cone top, valued at $40-$45. The entire set 
of 800 cans, he estimated, is worth about 
$1,200, and more if the cans were sold 
separately. 

Some of the most valuable cans on the 
market today are the 1952 Budweiser Bock 
punch top, worth $300; the $275 Williams 
Purple Cow; Soul beer cans, valued at $200; 
and a 007 series which goes for about $150 
per can, Senesac said. 

"When beer was first produced," he 
said, "brewers didn't know if people would 
buy it in cans. They made steel cans with 
cone tops so that the cans could fit into 
ordinary bottle machines. Then they 
switched to flat tops, and today tabs are 
used for convenience. Steel cans are still 
produced, but the trend is to aluminum. 
The colors on steel cans are much more 
vivid, though.** 

One of Senesac*s favorite cans, and one 
of the most notorious names among beer 
can collectors, is "Olde Frothingslosh," 
which features a fat lady in a bathing suit on 
the can. It was started by a Pittsburgh disc 
jiKkey as a joke, but it caught on, Senesac 
said. 

The "Horlacher" can in his collection 
was bought for "a purely emotional reason. 
It's the brand of beer my father drank when 
I was a kid, and I remember pulling the. tab 
on it and giving it to him.** 

He has beer cans from many of the 
United States, including Prinz Brau from 
Alaska and Primo from Hawaii, and from 
such countries as Nicaragua, Sweden, 
Scotland, Mexico, Japan, Germany, 
Canada, Holland, Phillipines. Italy, Brazil, 
Argentina, Puerto Rico, Austria and South 
Africa. 

Many companies produce special series 
cans, like Sterling's Kentucky Derby 
series and Brickskeller's endangered 
species set. 

Cans are also produced for such special 
occasions as hoiidays awl conventions, and 



Rick Senesak and a few cans 



for special groups. 

"Base Brau," for example, was sold in 
the ballpark of a Wisconsin minor league 
baseball team. Many colleges produce cans 
showing their college football schedules, 
and Senesac is the proud owner of a 
University of Houston can which Hsts FSU 
as one of the team's opponents. 

Has Senesac lasted all of the brew on his 
shelves? "If I did," he said, laughing, "1 
wouldn't have a liver left. Emptying some 
of the cans is fun, but some of the smaller 
brands are really bad. I've bought some 
six-packs, and after drinking one can, 
punched holes in the bottoms of the 
others.** 

Senesac adds to his collection by trading 
and buying through the mail, at shows and 
at meets. He is presently waiting for 
shipments from Brazil and Germany. And 
he is not above raiding garbage dumps and 
searching along roadsides for discarded 
cans that might be valuable. 

Trading, however, is a problem. "When I 
lived in New Jersey," he said, *i traded 
cans from the local breweries with others. 
But here in Tallahassee. there*s nothing to 
trade.** 

There was a time, at the turn of the 
century, he said, when almost every town 
had its own brewery. But now the bigger 
breweries are buying out the smaller ones, 
and the result is less variety in beer cans. 

As a collector, Senesac regards the waste 
of his past with some regret. 

••In college,'* he said, •*! drank about 
$400-$500 worth of OrlMt beer because it 
was cheap — only aboot 95 cents a six pack. 
Now those cans are hard to get, aii4 1 sure 
wish I'd saved at least «ic." 

Beer can collectors, like any other group, 
have their share of probiems. 

**With American cans,'* Senesac said, 
"there's a trend for owners o€ Kcpwr store 
chains to have the smaOer brewer make 
single brands of beet in seven or eight 
different colored cans. This way, they make 
more money, but it's a rip-off to coflectors. 
This practice can help younger collectors to 
beef up their collectioBS. bat 1 doa't like it, 
and several beer can expecting organiza- 
tions are protesting it. 

**Bui the best thing i^KNit coflectliig." 
Senesac concluded, "is havii^ a wHe who 
doesn't mind beer etm aO over the place.** 





USMG HYPNOSIS 



In aight prtv«t» and 
to raad upward of 
and ratantion. Tha 



w^MTi. wHh battar 
of Kypnoala 




gKran in 

tacfmiquas, but not prtvata or ^ 
•vailabte tor tlioM not dMirins liypaMli 





PHONE 386-3031 

The AiMficM hslflvto if NypMtii 



Hows 10 ajn.-t p.m. 

In 



cooococo©» 



iijiiiiiii 



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PRESENTS THE 



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REGULARLY $6.99 

THIS MONTH ONLY $4.99 
iUKmiER SPEOAL R» YOU AT 



YOUT 

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• ^ • f ^ ^ 




r ' • • • o r" • • ' 







I 





Arfs/ Features 



Bonham's art transplant: 
Stuck in Tallahassee with 
the New York blues again 




Im a wateiMwse west of TaHahassec lives 
aiovdf fPiMDJii. She flies. She is brown, 

IS white: she is wood, and metaJ. 

ind she is the f-jitas>' angel 
bkthedby sc«}ptor ar.i f SL professor Doc 
BoDhajD, who Mves m the warebcmse with 



Perhaps a warehouse is the best plate to 
her. In more polrticaJly charged times 

a B^vfinarn s citations have been 
ridiculed as obscene or anti-Amencan. SHck 
color photographs of them have graced 




Don 
Bonham 



fliylioy's pages so fewer Ite tfiKe times. 
'Ho ytm kaow nytfuiig about ny work? he 
oistiosf over the phoae. "I'm a 
oiNitfoversial bm." 

Moit of BoolMB'ft pieces, like the tyig 
woaun. co w btn e molded fiberglass with 
whkle parts to ghre the impression of a 
female madw a r ; many do so with ei^plicitly 
amai ferm and color. A gtistening red 
moloicycle miqr have wlieeis and aa exhaust 
bat it ii alao aa. ciqaiiitely caat ffl>ergalss 
amid af a woaym's body; aad there are ao 
iwadifb a r t to dbig to bet her bnraits. A 
facing boat takaa the ferm of a pro^rate 
aoama with a cockpit betweea her thighs. 
Whea the driver (Booham. alias the 
Hftaiaa Goode Aesthetic Sacti^ team> sits 
ia that cockpit aad doaa Ma red hefanet, the 



Boaham arrived at FSU for 
app o iatB icat aa am o ciitc prafeMor ia IfB. 
He had aa iftferaatiMud -repatatios aad 
cajoyed the stagnim- diitinctiuii af beii^ aa 
Americaa artist iavited mto the Soyal 
C a n a dian Acadmay of Art. He had 

4boafs both ia North 
overseas: Ontario, Montreal, London, 
New York, Wadliagtoa, Ghtcago. 
But by 1975 the coooomy ia bodi the U^. 
Caaada had gioara tight. Bnritem'a 
lediaed, aad whea a jab teaduag 
hi TiBihiwfc was offered, he had to weigh 
the draarbacka of tlus rehrtively ntral 
awkiag cavirooaieiit agwait the aeearity 
of a regalar salary. 

"Aa aftiat is like evctybody dse. He's 
got to eat. 1 dida't waat my wife aad three 
kids to five hi a left forever, b Caaada thea 
we had ao mtmace. We had aothii^." 

So Boidlam aiovad to TaBahasaee. Ifia 
feail^ stays in New Yoik, where Ins wife 
works. Ob hofidiQfs tiiey try to get together. 
'Mqr the artist IMS m the back af kos 



, in a platform room sectioned off 
workspace by cheap paneling and 
sheet plastic. His lovely flying ladies, 
asking price S30,000, modestly grace the 
rafters. 

What is it like to be an expensive, 
avant-garde artist in a town like 
Tallahassee? Bonham waies paradoxicaJ. 
••Well. Tallahassee is a pleasant town. And 
I love teaching, h's an exciting adventure. 
And let me tell you. we have a damn good 
department, and a dean who does his best 
to help us out. 

"But let's face it: Tallahassee is not New 
York, and you can only seli avant-garde art 
out of New York. Not Atlanta, Los Angeles. 
Houston, loiedo, or Tallahassee. Only New 
York. 

"There, art is a commodity a 
multi-million dollar business. If you don't 
believe it, look at ail the Cadillacs. Lincoln 
G>ntinentals. and Porsches parked in Soho. 
Art is the best investment going. Better 
than real estate, bener than stocks. But art 
won t sell m Tallahassee." 

Though Bonham loves to teach, he does it 
because he must; if he could support 
himself just by making art. he would, and 
he thinks a society that insists that its artists 
teach in order to eat is a society with 
priorities askew. 

**1 have a right as an artist not to teach . . 
In Canada now, most artists don't teach. A 
few years ago the artists there got together 
and they went on strike, wouldn't show 
their work. Everybody said it wouldn't 
matter, they could do without art. 

"But you don't know what you've got 
until you've lost it; and in six months those 
galleries were crying for shows. The artists 
won ... In Canada they're paid for shows. 
And in Europe they're starting to pay . . . 




Bonham's latest 



Here we pay the gallery staff, the secretary, 
and the janitor, but we don't pay the artist. 

"There are communities where artists 
dare the ultimate, and everyone else the 
fringe. Here, it's the opposite: Frampton. 
the Bee Gees, and Barry Manilow are the 
ultimate — the ultimate mundane. Yet 
millions of dollars are spent to push that 
crap. . . West Tennessee Street is the 
world. Whether we like it or dislike it, wc 
have to compete with it and five in it. 

"The artist " he says, "has 
shrugged off because he's allowed 
to be shrugged off. Everyone has clung to 
that 19lh century starving artist concept. 
That's ridiculous. Artists are piodnctive 
members of society. 

* 'Artists should not do something for 
free. We need to organize like other 
minorities. And you should pay three 
dollars to get into my show. You pay that 
much for movies all the time." 

"Bonham thinks the students he teaches 




Junior Bird woman 



Don Bonham looks on 



here today are amre aerkxts than those is 
the late aiities, aad he thinks they have t 
keener aad amae prideful sease of 
themselves as baih basiaessaMa and 

artists. 

"When I visaed here aa years ago." be 
recalls. "1 found Tallahaaaee infected by 
laid-back iadividaab whoae total dais to 

Itfe was two dogs aad aae gpHar. That was 

aaiv ei sa l thes. 

"But nqr stadeals now ase Ugfaly 
ooauDltted, very aerioas. It's aat popahff 
to be an artist warn. Theae are basically 
middle dass kids; art ooaws from the 
aaddledass. If they reflect tiie awkfle dass 
IB tfieir art. it's from knowing it; if they 
reject, it's from kanaiaft it. They are very 
dedicated." 

He jerks his tteaiib ia directioB of his 
two apprentices, st^ggfiag over a fiberglass 
fona at atlKr ead of the shop. *'Aad 
these are the kids." he says, "who're 
gonna make thiags good for the artists. 
They know how much they're 

Today Bonham is Iqriag 
He is producing small pieces, and 
reproducing them in lots of 50, and sdtog 
them for lots less thmi a fljr^g lady or a 
penile tank. Thry niaiiaui hli tiind hw ini 
self-contained, serene, goddess-like women 
mated wtth airplaaes. He shows them with 
pride. 

But he doesn't like to talk about them. 

"It's hard to describe my work verbally." 
he says, "becanse.l deal with it visually. 
And i don't want to bfov nybody else's 
conception of it. Whea yoa waft oat of here 
you will have some aew visual 
understanding. Hie goddaaai staff stands 
on its own." 

He resists, too, a suggestioa to taft aboat 
the chaages in his work over the years 
answering simply: "It's better. I'm 
developing aad growiag. I'm still dea^ 
with the saaie thiags, aad 1 probably always 
wiU. But then. Albredtt ^cat 4S 
one color problem. 

' And if I heep at It," he adds 
grin, **I may make aoaw dmna good art 
before I drop dead." 



Lamp 



Chris Miller. N*ntc^ 

Animal House. •* wi 
Ihcatre in the Fine 

filler will s< " 
I^Slv?. bv dts.usstni 
offering helpful .ulvu 

In addiii*Hi to th< 
Miller will read fr- 
favorites as Or. .j 

Caked Jov Rag." * 
High SchcK>l." and ' 

Miller, after gradi 
five years on Mads 



Chapi 
to fee 



*T^as a time whei 
and little action. 

But when the ai 
"Taxi'" made the bij 
hf^'s^lfly*' consciuu ! 
hunger. 

•*At a certain poii 
own bull." (liapii 
conference prior to 
night. 

"A lot t)f people 
with the Banglade] 
problem vMth Peter, 
steps, but that's nt»i 
support for the Worj 

Chapin co-fnundef 
research organi/aM* 
agencies to drav\ 
starvation in 20 veai 

"America dois nj 

that's the flat-oii* 

smger will be in \ 

a member of 

Commissit)n. 

Chapin played to 

night. Seemingly U\ 

the weeke nd. C hal 

standards — openin] 

some of his more 



The 



It was rcminiscn) 
yet to wear his firsi 
and audiences lau; 
toward a typical c 

Thanks to the j' lni 
and LPO, Tallaha; 
weekends of entert 
Prophet. Jimmy A 
20- minute set, tv*.' 
Saturdav in th- f» 

Alan Prophet i>pt 
telling humor. A l^| 
side quickly with hi 

By far the best r aj 
he did his impers 
party after the sev^ 
an otherwise ntell. 
act to follow. 

. Jimmy Aleck is ' 



m 



Lampoon editor to speak tonight 



Chns Miller, writer for Nttiofial Umpoon tad aythor of 

Animal House/' wiO speak tonlglit at 8 in the Mainstage 
1 hcatre in the Fine Aria Bafldhig. 

Miller will seek to answer tfie age-old tabject, is sex 
funnv?. by discussing bis many theories oo the sahject and 
. tfcring helpful advice to the naive and rtnple-niiaded. 

In addition to the lecture portion of his presentation, 
vfiilcr will read from his body of stories, indnding such 
favorites as "<koin Laroeay/' •Ihe TaOnt Papers," 
Caked Joy Rag,*' "Stacked Ltte Me/' "Taleror Nozzlin 
High School/' and "Pinto's Ffert Lay/' 

Miller, after graduating from Dortmontfi Coflege, spent 
five years on Madsion Avenoe writing commercials for 



Oxydol before finding his true place in life as a writer for a 
sleazy, pornographic tabloid. Eventually he moved up to a 
slick, sophomoric tabloid and began his career with the 
Lampoon. 

''Animal House/' the film Miller co-wrote, is one of u.l 
most successful movies of the vear and currently enjoys a 
cult-like following on college campuses throughout the 
nation. The film gives new significance to the word "toga." 

Mifler's appearance is sponsored by CPE, LPO and the 
Student Government Lecture Series. Admission to the 
lecture is free, on a first-come, first-serve basis. Should all 
seats be taken, television monitors will be set up outside the 
auditorium. 




Chris Miller 



Chapin uses fame 
to feed the hungry 



by jeff mangum 

HambMu tfaff writer 

Twas a time when balladeer Harry Chapin was all song 
and little action. 

But when the author of "Cats in the Cradle" and 
* Taxi" made the big time in 1972, he chose to flex some of 
hls^s^ffl^Tconscious muscles to work for an end to world 
hunger. 

"At a certain point, you grow up and have to face your 
own bull/' Chapin said during a Tallahassee press 
conference prior to a benefit performance at FSU last 
night. 

**A lot of people think we solved the hunger problem 
with the Bangladesh concert in 1971 and the racial 
problem with Peter, Paul and Mary singing on the Capitol 
steps, but that's not so," Chapin observed while soliciting 
support for the Worid Hunger Year (WHY). 

Chapin co-founded WHY in 1975 as an information and 
research organization to work with Congress and federal 
agencies to draw up programs aimed at ^»dicating 
starvation in 20 years. 

"America does not have a cohesive food policy and 
that's the flat-out truth," Chapin said. The 36-year-old 
singer will l)e in Washington today for his first meeting as 
a member of President Carter's World Hunger 
Commission. 

Chapin played to an audience of 1,400 at Tully Gym last 
night. Seemingly fresh from four concerts in Miami over 
the weekend, Chapin and his baml belted out the 
standards — opening with 'Taxi" ~ Aen venturing on to 
some of his more recent work. 




Harry. Chapin 



pholo by saliy Mndusky 



Chapin 's voice was clear and resonant, though his band 
could have held back on some numbers to allow Chapin's 
words, and not the instruments, to shine. 

Use of the cello was particularly effective, lending a 
melodic, tender note to Chapin 's poetry. 

After his performance at Tully, Chapin drove to 
Jacksonville to catch a 4 a.m. pkine to Atlanta, flying from 
there to Washington. 

The artist said he does about 200 ccmcerts a year, half of 
which are benefits for the campaign against Jiunger. 



The Comedy Store delivers hilarity 



by greg anderson 

flambeau writMr 

It was reminiscent of the days when Steve Martin had 
vol to wear his first white suit, when comedy was tested 
and audiences laughed hysterically at stories directed 
ftnvard a typical college student's lite. 

Thanks to the joint efforts of The Comedy Store in L.A. 
and LPO. Tallahassee was given one of the finest 
weekends of entertainment in a long, l-.o-n-g while. Alan 
Prophet. Jimmy Aleck and Michael Keaton each did a 
20-minuie set, two shows a night Thursday through 
Saturday in the Downunder. 

Alan Prophet opened with his blend of laid-back, story- 
telling humor. A 1970 alumnus, he got on the audiences* 
side quickly with his remarks about life at FSU. 

By tar the best routine was his second show finale where 
he did his impersonation of "a bladder at a fraternity keg 
party after the seventh beer. * It was his up-tempo skit in 
an otherwise mellow act that set the stage perfectly for the 
act to follow . 

Jimmy Aleck is no stranger either to FSU, appearing at 



the Downunder last year in a solo act. Fresh off a tour with 
Tina Turner, AIe<* was tan to watch, constantly bouncing 
around the stage and playing with the aucttence. The house 
was in hysterics from the time he first asked then- opinions 
of his show. Here was a man whose facial expressions 
were enough to set you howling. 

A favorite story to the many of those returning -for a 
second night was Aleck's bit on health food and those poor 
health nuts "who eat lettuce only because they're too weak 
lo pick up meat.*' A confessed junk-food addict, Aleck 
can't understand why anyone woald eat vegetables that 
were once covered with dirt and a haven for crawly tlungs 
when man could eat Twmkies whidi ev«yone knows are 
produced in a nice clean factory. 

The set's final act belonged to Michael Keaton. His 
impromptu puppet show, starring posters of the recent SG 
elections, was tastefully rude, but brought by far the 
biggest laugh in the act. 

It was a weekend of fraternity and drug jokes, hecklers, 
stories and skits which those fortunate enough to have 
seen them will remember for quite a while. 




A 



314 University Union 644-57441 
camera rondv nrt j 



Greyhound Rk. 
The cure for 
college Mahs. 




i 




it's a feeling that slowly descends upon 
you. The exams, the pop tests, the required 
reading, the hours at the library, the thesis — 
they won't go away. 

But you can. This weekend, take off, say 
hello to your friends, see the sights, have a 
great time. You'll arrive with money in your 
pocket t)ecause your Greyhound trip doesnt 
take that much out of it. 

If you're feeling tired, depressed and 
exhausted, grab a Greyhound and split. It's a 
sure cure fpr the blahs. 



















Jacksonviie 


$11.36 


$21 .eo 


6:00 p.m. 


Orlando 


$16.80 


$31.95 


6KX) p.m. 


Tampa 


$16.60 


$31.55 


220 p.m. 


Montgomery 


$18.05 


$34.30' 


5-30 p.m. 


West Palm 


$25.66 


$46.75 


6:00 p.m. 


Beach 









9:36 p.m. 
12:10 a.m. 

8:25 p.m. 
9:50 p.m. 
3:55 a m 



Ask yiMv agem alnui addMonal departures and leMn anpB. 



112 W8ttT< 




fiPfiimXiD 



Cheap Thrilb 



for Ofpenna Mmk HaU 
have hoes citcsiicd dtonmii 0bc 1« woonfim to 
Tane> S liMiir 

Tl» lint eveat of the series is the Dec. 9 perfonnaoce of 
Mmn Shaakar. The mt «f the schedule is: The Blacieaith 
P^ciis$iofi Gtm^, lam. 13; Ro%Miyn Tureck, Jan. 27; 
ClevelaMi Si^^f ^Mflct, Fell. IS* jmI QiyiMas Tfio^ 
Aprfl 5. 



ickets arc %2u lor ine geaeral public, faculty ind 
- s with identificaticMi inajr h«y for SI 2. Tickets 
at the Central Ticket Office. Uni\ersity Union. 
T s Rook S%art amd Ike Pkum Taee hi 



and at Ahnar's Book Stove 
Man. 
for imtiiidiiil 



wttheSS 



S9 



iota Taa (LIT) win spossor an oodergraduate 
ott the lofMc, **ldeas of Older in Uteratme 
aad/or flB.** llK cMlest is lo utdainAi^es of ai^ 

The essays anst be 2.500 wofds (lea tTped pairs), typed. 



p: and fumed ^ ^ m 314 Willum^ -o f^^ 

Wiisiinia Chem on Frida . - b\ 5 p.m. The Tic 

must ha%e the following information: student \ 
address telephone number, social secahty number 
major. 

First prize will be S40 and a public readhig of »hr - 
the Fourth Annual Conference on Literature and F - jjj, 
2S-27. 1979. Secoad prize ariU be S20 aad honot^ 



Page 1 lina^ Center libraries are having h(rfida. 
gift and decotatioo workshops beginning toroom>u Ca! 
Uacola Center at 224-1701 or Page I at 57eM)5T6 







1974 
6^ i 



Yarrutfia 3S0 One rieimet. in good 
♦M3r $350 or t)«t o««r Call 



lie T . 
MocM 212 less csrtr 



4 




HELP! SAVE A LIFE - NEED TWO 
FLA. TICKETS STII06NT OR 



NEED TO BUY A USED I.0N6 
FEMALE WINTER COAT. AlEOfUM 
SIZE CALL 



HOUSE PAINTII 
WALLCOVERINa 



Cam Mtf 224-7749 Mr estimate 



WANTED 7 FSU - FLA TICICETS 
CAU.0IMMI44VS ttiS 



CNAIR WCAVffWa 

ref ei 'cr>c w reeson- 



*Vdr-te<J 4 FSU Vs Fla 9u«t fkfcets 
can 57S-07S4 »ny^ after 4 00 



f1 JEAMS AT poom mCMi 
Buy one et reg. price, 2nd peir is on»y 
t1 New styles a bran^ arrrytng. 

7( 




I STRI 

Orwe day se^'ce. Lowest 
towr, Ca B at 57^4nB6 



Dun woody Apartments, 

St. Res 
3K-9392. Sorry, no pets. 



AAodem I letyew — 
or individuals. Cai 



wSM teach groups 



UOWCfTMiCES IN TOWN 

on drapes, rugs, cyrtains, 
OtoMftes. dressers, bads, desks, books, 
fiacords & lots of ottier useful 
Tkt OM 



^ Bddrm. $W5 1 year tease 2600 
w. Pots. (San Pstioies; anytime a#lcr 



MOST CLASS RINGS 110-138 
WEDDING BANDS S»-t2S 
Price depends or weigttt 
ALSO TOP CASH S FOR COINS 
SILVER DOLLARS at leas t j4 



HOLIDAY PORTRAITS in convenient 
packages... 2 5x7s, 4 wraiiets only 
S17 50- 1 8x10, 2 5x7s. 4 wallets only 
S27 50 ttiru Nov. 25 at Delmar Stvdio 
Pnolograpliy 117W S. Monroe St. Call 




SU^R DEAL! OLYMPIA ELEC 
WI0FESSIONAL TYPEWRITER 
OOOD CONDITION. AMCMfO SHJI 

CALL 57^3505 

JOG HOG for ladies. KooM Jogglno 
tops, only St reg.SIS. POOm 
■ICNARD'S Between Eckerds & 
FtaAix in Westwood Shopptno Center. 
Sy4-2lfi 

TWIN REVERB FENDER AMP IF 
INTERESTED IN A GOOD SOUND 
CALL DAWN MMWS MON THRU 

FRI 8 tOS 

Fisher SR1 10 stereo cassette deck 
wim dotby, I>u«l mic. Jacks, a more. 
CaM 2844345 EvJwt.Pficd nop. 

MOPED MAJIC 197f VelOSOiex mo 
ped Exceii cond Ail accesorias inct. 
250 dollars CHEAP! 575^9074. 



Share house with pool, woihsr, dryer 

Central heat & air. Furnished except 
for bedroom. SHXMnonth 4 1-3 utilities 
576^ai3 

Take over contract at Osceola 
nice room pool sauna partiOK 

caH ~ ' 



1 BOR UNFURN APT FOR 
SUBLEASE. PLAZA APTS W BRE- 
VARD CALL 222 9951 OR 224-1029 

ROOMAAATE: FEMALE SHARE 
APT 1 mm. from FSU IBOrm fum 
cwMral A ft M iMOl free catMe sauna 
mo CaN 44«1t11 day or 574346* 





WANTED; FSU UF FOOTBALL 
TICKETS CALL 2244174 



71 OPEL 1900 1ST KAPUT! 

Engine blown and body damage Will 

sell wnoie or in parts. Call 224-4688. 

'72 Gremlin X, excaliont cond. 
a04.V— , HufN 340d. %\m or boot. 



FMML RMMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM 
APT MISSION RIDGE DEC OR JAN 
SIOUO-hWriL 575-0464 

Will pay for 3 tickets to FSU Fla 
game^efer Ihem t e ysRi ei CaN Pat 
222 9241 



PART-TIME X>BS - BIG MONEY: 
Accounting, Law or Pre-Law students 
preferred. Ail aggressive, artioHate, 
hungry students o k. Need sales reps 
for CAP LSAT Cassette Home Study 
Programs. Call Jim Dee at Totaitape, 
Inc. Toil Free 1S00-t74-7599. in 
Florida call collect 904-376^1. 1S05 
N.W. liMi Av«., Gainesville, Fl. SMM 

BABYSITTER NEEDED FOR OC 
CASIONAL LATE EVENINGS CALL 
5750409 OR STCTS 

Part time position availaMe at Scan 
I>BSign. Stodudelivery-sales, 10-15hrs 
per wwk. Call for appt. 3K4D42 

WANTED A VIOLIN PLAYER TO 
PERFORM AT A PRIVATE PARTY 
CALL 222-177S 



KICKOFF MONDAY'S WITH FREE 
POOL FOR LADIES, DRINK BUSCH 
SI.7S Pitcher at BREW A CUE 422 N. 



PREGNANT? 
TAPPS Offers free t«gf and help in 

problem pregnancies 222 7177 /WWF 
9:30^11:30AM, TTh 64:00 PM 



WANTED 
NAVY TICKETS 
WILL PAY iS EACH 
CALL DAN 222 3541 




73 GREMLIN, STICK. A.C 
26,000 Ml. RUNS WELL 

575^2166 ^ 

PINT073 AM Vori' good condition 
new gas tank new battery new tires 
flHior best offer call 576 «76» 



6 NAVY FSU TICKETS WANTED 
CALL 5754»M AFTER 5 
CAL L 644 3ia aEFQRE 

Mature person to share fum. 2 bdr 
house near fairgrounds Quiet big yd. 
Fireplace 95 nw-f' /Totil. 877 7942 



174 PIAT SPIDER 
CONDITION. Sea at Mt Wast 
T« 



Roommate 
-l-MuffI nrtature 

>ln 



Nov. 10 S6750 
ROT smoker to share 3 



Fast accurate typist-IBM correcting 
selec.-papers, dissert^ mmb. Undo 
Durbin 576^1988 

Let POOR RICHARI>'S hem your 
pants or jeans for only $1.50 (^ash 
arxl dry 1st brir»g the shoes you plan 
to wear w-ttiem) next to Pubiix in 
Weshwood Shopping Centar SI»-21M 
7( 



CompM Hairstyling-Wash, condl^ 
Won, cut a blow diry $4.50. Acid 
balance perms $15 00 Henna's 
neutral or color-$7.00 short hair or 
$9.00 for long hair. All work by 
students urKler supervnion of Qaalf- 
fied instructors. Tall. Coltego of 
Barber Styling. 1221 Appalachee 
Pkwy. call •77-3020 for appt. Cksed 
Mondays. 



APPLIANCES 
Will buy and-or haul off 
fPp'-ances- Call Marshall 
^**-7t7f (pocket beeper) 
LICEWSED^ 



Need Cash? I buy & sell turn. -TV- 
tools-guitars fans-heaters-art obfocts 
DANNY'S YARD SALE 1017 Thom- 
asvlMa IM. Evary Sat. 9-5 call anytime 



For Abortk)n3, pregnancy scri 
Mrlh control or hoaim infot. call lha 



Call Doug 22240S5 



TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE 
W75 Vega Slaflen wagon in good 
condition new brakes St tires. Will not 
explode if hit from rear. $l 

Dawn at 6444075 M-F ilo 5. 

71 TR4 GOOD CON^ ' ^ N, 
ONE OWNER, LOVV Miu£AGE 



must 



Can 234mi9 



4* 



MOPED: BATAVUS VA H550 WITH 
HELMET. ALAAOST NEW CALL 
9)2 226 1542 



1977 Yamaha 340 Exc. Cond. 
driven with 2 helmets S cover • 
best oNer S77-0641 after 7pm 



Adult 



Need M or F to sublease my contract 

at Osceola Hall Pool sauna exer Rm 
maid service study rm Rec rm At lots 
Of good food 222 S590 anytime 

Desperately need 2 tickets to 
FSU-Fla. game. Will 
price. Calf6444IIB4. 

AAOTOR DRIVE FOR CANON F 1 IN 
GOOD CONDITION PAY CASH 
CALL 2248045 OR 644-5505 ASK FOR 
JONATHAN 



HELPI I NEED 3 TICKETS TO THE 
FLA. GAME. I WILL PAY. CALL 

KARLA 222.97BS anytima bafara 

11:00P.M. 



FML non smoker to share very nice 
quiet 2bdrm turn apt ck)se lo FSU 
t37-ma-l-<>WII-i-iBtfspos caw 

ROOMMATE NEEDED ASAP 

SHARE NICE HOUSE NEAR 
CAMPUS $80 -i- UTILITIES 
224-9409 

Need rmate to share large furnished 2 
bdr 1</iMhaptat Berkshire $110-mo. 
Vk util. No depot. Frank 5756012 



Typing IBM • fast efficient 
^ P«f.PO0« OBL space, tSc sMola 
Phone 575-2007 or 222-7629 



APPLIANCE REPAIR 
Service on all mafor appliances, air 

conditioning and heating. Sales- 
reconditioned units with 90 day 
warranty. Can MarshaM, 
599 7879 fpocket beeper) 
Ever r g 878-5026. LICENSED 

•ASS LESSONS 

Jazz and Contemporary Styles 
TECHNIQUE AND THEORY 



Oof Ibe monchies? We have ttte cure 
SablMng now makes housecalls. If 
yev live on ttte west side, give vs a call 
at 574-2194 and we'll deliver one of ear 
■raai taadw ri c ii s* to yaw Oaarilipo* 
l:3i pMi-11:)0 pm only 

WE TAKE THE TIME TO DO IT 
RIONT. Headquarters has henna, 
perms and great haircuts. Headquar- 
ters 3017 W. f>ensacoia St. SM-15TI. 

Be good to your hair so it will be good 
to you. Lanham Products now at 
Headquarters Haircutting. 3017 W. 
St. 576-1511. 



/ 



Backgammon Tournament Cash 

Priies every Mon. at 7:30[!Mn 

POOR PAUL'S POURHOUSE n«t to 



IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! 
Send $1.00 for your 256^age, mail 
order catalog of Collegiate Research 
10.250 topics listed. Prompt Delivery 

C213) 



TYPING, FAST, EXECUTIVE 
MACHINE THESIS, PAPERS, ECT. 
IBC P0. 3iMl43. 



Keep in tune 
CRAIG BLOCH PIANO TUNI 
RESTORATION, MOVINGS, 
ESTIMATES 

222-S464 



GAY RAPOROUPGAY RAPOROUP 

Now on Tuesdays 8p.m. 318 Bryan 
Hall. New format, speakers, tallci, 
ate. ate. ate. 

GET YOUR TOGAS OUT! Chris 
Miller, author of ANIMAL HOUSE 8i 
Natl Lampoon writer, talks on "Is Sex 
Funny?" tPM NovS FAB Aud FREE! 

NOVEMBE1? HAIR SPECIAL!! 
OUR REG $35 ACID PERM $35 
$22 ORGANiG HENNA $15 

CALL BOB. 

WAREHOUSE HAIRCU7TERS. 
PHONE 2224664. 



GREEK WOMEN 

Fall Formal Nov 9 
«|pm-1am featuring ELI. See your 
Panhelieric Rep for tidiefs and infa. 



within love yai 
you hurt me and youtBOse. crucify 
mo, deify me, lift mo from my iawes, 
put me back down, help me up and I 
fum right around and do ttte same for 
you. You are, of course, my reason for 
living. Stephen who is not so strong. 




D scuss or on tho Baba^ Faith. 
Nov. 9, 7:30 p.m. Main Lounge COOf. 
Rm. Any questions, call 222-0933. 
EVERYONE WELCOME! If 

Med. PIZZA $1.75 AT TNE PUB 1313 
W. Tenn. ». 11am4pm MONDAYS 



GEEK IS THE WORD? 
GEEK IS THE WORD! 



monsy. 
nrt,BS 



CELL04uffsise! 

also 

Guitar, guild F50R, rosewood back 
Ltsts for $1100 asking $750 This s an 
exce4ient buy and I need ttie 
irs only 3 mons Old. CaB 
599-5130 aft 5 Sl»4i77 

Do you need top score on graduate 
school admission exams? Take GRE, 
GAAAT, LSAT, MCAT on YOUR 

schedule and at YOUR paca. CaN 
Stanley H. Kaplan Ed. Or. 077-0010 



R EWARO TO FINDER ! 
Lost dogs 2 yr Old WackAtan gvnwi 
shepard, male long sn ha«r, i yr gn 
^* ^ "Men relr ievy. female, m 
BeRi dogs taieoed on right 
IMgh with S.S. no . t^u^? too* 
ctoacty. If seen or toufv] dims* c* 
177 4451, 997 3069, 222 8492 M5 '53C 

FOUND BLACK LAB CALL S99H3I 



LOST LARGE REWARD! 
MALE COLLIE MIX MEC SIZE 
TR I -COLORED MOSTLY BLK 
LONG HAIR ANSWERS TO KILO 
LOST IN MVEaS PK AREA 
PLEASE CALL 2S4.iai 



me 



Old fashioned Italian dinners at 
affordable prices in attractive 
surroundings at Tony's House of Hero 
Downtown. Also beer and wina. 7 
nighls a waek. 224 E. CaHege Aw. 

SATISFYING AND SENSATIONAL 
SNACKS AND SANDWHICHES AT 
THE STREAK! 



TODAY'S TRADING POST TREAT 
FREE medium beverage with a t>ot 
oomed beef and c he e se on your choice 
of bread for $1.97. Also try our hot 
soup of the day and rwtural snacks 
from Leon County Food Coop. 

come watch tt«e f unnies t a fhletl c 
event of nte year Nov. 10. Sponsored 
by FSU Panhellenic for Muscular 
Dystrophy 



Tracy, you're ttie best roommate I've 
aver had and could hope for. Thanks 
for a gmt friendship. 

Love, ThaORMr Gvina Kid 

TM, Yoga, and the Bible. Are they in 
a g reem ent? Confronting ttie cults. 
7p.m. 143 Bellamy 

To all my friends -fftanks for the 
GREATEST birttiday ever! I love you 
all! Lynann PS Thanx for ttie swim 
Wad. nlie siuys Itie water was great! 



Rm. 314 University Unioo 

644-5744 

9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 




Philippe Junnt. 
Married to Royalty: 
"I got my position as 
husband of Princes.s 
Caroiine with a .Mediaiypt- 
resume."' 



DAN, may IMe last tor a ya r l0i«; 

and iowt Nve forever strong. 
Happy Biraiday-my tova aheays, 
Patfi 



Have an idea? A 
Governmeat 
day— 24 



that 
salvo? Any 

Krikpatrick 




Screaming pinK flamingos running 



wild 



icroos your 



Baaign 



am lay-out. 



ROTARY 
TELL SUSAN I LOVE HER 




FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 

FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
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FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
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FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 
FLUTTER 




FLORfDA FLAMBEAU Monday, Novembcf 6^ 1978 / 18 




SU sails to third place 



On a cloudless and nearly windless 
I Mirdav. the FSU Sailing Club took third 
! in the tenth annual FSU InviUtional 
I ,ria on Lake Jackson. 
1 he FSU racing team of Ed Secunda and 
aren Kolnick took first place in the 
ivision '*B' race, while in the division 
A" race, the FSU team finished third. 

Sailing takes more skill, patience and 
trategy when there's little or no wind,'* 



said FSU team member Kolnick, "because 
all it takes is one screw -up and you've lost 
the race.*' 

The University of Florida was first w ith 19 
points and the University of South Florida 
second with 23 in the annual event. The 
FSU team garnered 28 points. 

Eckerd College (32 points) and Pensacola 
Junior College (51 points) rounded out the 
five-team field. 




Men harriers win Metro 



by gor»M Mttoy 



Led by one of Hie more eiceptkmal 
efiorts of ftedunan Hecb Wills' brief 
collegiate career, FSU captared the Metro 
Conference cross ooiti^ title Saftnrday. bt 
so doing they finished ahead of teams from 

St. Louis and Virghiia Tech. 
FSU coadi Jotei Brogle. in his first year 

at the helm, though pleased, was not 
surprised by his team's effort. 

'*Going h^ tibe meet we ^d not expect 
to win," ftogie noted. "But I knew we had 
the character to win so I was not 
particularly surprised." 

bi addition to who captured ^ 
individual crown over defending champion 
Bemie WeM>er of Ondnaati, Brogle had 
praises for Tom Herron, who finished 



fourth and John Hodge, whose seventh 
place effort Bro^ labeled the * 'best race<^ 
his life." 

Speaking of Wills' dominating perform- 
ance. Brogle noted, **He's always ready for 
the big races. I was surprised to see him 
take such a big lead early since he 
generally comes from behind. But it was 
his effort that provided the incentive and 
adrenalin for the rest of the team to turn in 
their great performances." 

Brogle was also very happy with the 
community participation in the open meet 
where better than 120 runners competed, 
with two former FSU runners Donnie Cook 
and Mike Sauter finishing 2nd and 3rd. 

Two weeks from now the Seminoies head 
for Greenville, S.C. and the regional 
championships. 




over Lake Jackson #s she and taammata 

Jim Fox of the FSU sailing ckib near the 
finish line in yesterday's FSU Invitathnal 



photo by karsn kdniok 

Raffatta. The UrwrarsitY of Fhrida club 

wokiksipiaeain fhaammafa¥ant FSU 

canwkf third. 



. . .but rough course vexes women 



by gerald ensley 

flaml>eau sports writer 

**We don't make excuses, but there were 
some extenuating circumstances." 

That was the way FSU coach Paul Toran 
expressed his disappointment with the 
FSU women's cross countary team's 
second place fmish at the regional 
Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for 
Women meet in Atlanta Saturday. 

"Alabama beat us. no question, but the 
course was dangerous and poorly 
marked." Toran claimed. **And in addition 
to not having Rose (Giampalmo. the 
Seminole number two runner out with a 



knee injury), we had some of the girls 
hurting with illness." 

The course, which Toran said was full of 
potholes and rocks that were hidden by tall 
grass, was a major factor m the finish of 
Kathy Moore. FSU's hendded top runner. 

Stepping into two deep holes within a 
huncked yards pre-meet favorite 

twisted her ankle sev«rfy, but despite the 
pain she came on to finish second 

The second place finish earned FSU a 
berth in the nationals, two weeks hence in 
Denver, though Toran admits. "We're 
hc^ng Kathy and Rose get well befMC 
then or we'll be in for a rough time." 




.^snii 

9 



ft 



71 i 

i i. 



I 




I 



n / Monday. Novwfter 6, 1978 FuC^tDA FUUMBEAAI 



Rattlers crush Alabama A&M 




r »^ aiso a iig day lor qiurtcrt^acfc 
Che%i£T. as f!he froold-oneiited Rattlers 
sarpnsa^h' gathered JCT* yards tkroegh tbe 
air. miaM Chester picfcisg 231 o# 
while cDfupieCHif Ml «f 22 



0MO. 



Rams nip Bugs 
in last 3 seconds; 

QB Williams hurt 

LOS AHGELhS (VFf) ~ Ronnie FtmA Corral kidked a 
27-yaj'd fjekJ j^<jaJ, his ffjurth three-pobrter of the 



with three seconds left yesterday to 

favored Los Aageica Imt a 
Bay Buc can e ers . 

ComllBkfccd the 
Bay ioored M a 23^«d fMs im Mfce : 
MdUy, Jr., to tie the fMW at 23-23 with 47 
appeared the caaw was headed for 



tbe heavi^ 
srtheTMpa 

ailer Tampa 
lae to John 
left. 
h«t the 

Rams drove 73 yards hi foiir plays to giv: Corral the 
opportiioity to win the g^me. Pat HMea hit Willie MMer 
OS passes 21 and 33 yards. Lawrence hfcCatcheon ran 
IS yafds aad John Cappeietii had a 1-fard ran to give the 
Bans the ball on the Taapa Bay 9-ymA iae heiofe Los 
Angeles uxjk its last thne-ostwilfc m 



Taaqia Bay lost its 
W imams, in the 
when he was hit by 
fitf. Bae. Wilhans' 
times, limbigd oaee 
yafdt* 

Ssapping a 
mahitai ned a fw< 
duelle d to 4-4. 



I>oag 

qsarter with a fractofed jaw 

a fitas 

t, was intercepted three 
i tHMs §m 70 

Los 

the NFC West. Ti 



Dolphins drop Dallas 

MIAMI fUPl) — Ouarterbadc Boh Griese guided the 
Miami offeasc to two touchdowns and a field goal in the 
first quarter yesterday and the Dolphins' defense held off 
a late f .^u^. fl TT It Tirtnqr nrrf thi ilniif Ihig 

Cowboys. 

The Crmboys' irc— d straight loss dropped the 
dcrfending Super Bowl champions to 6-4 for the season and 
left them a game and a half behind the NFC Eastern 
Division leading Washington Redskins. MiaflU, now 7-3, 
stayed within a game of fi^ 

FSU rugby team beats JU 



The PSU Mi*s raghy t 
IMvMity 26-0 Salwday m 
—HI iwoora IP nem 
Ihee the Uaiviaiftgr ef 



Jacksonville 
raising their 
d ie n igby club will 
at FSD. 




medicrtype 

9amio3pm 

Rm. 314 Ufitimity IMon 



typetetiing, layout €r 

paste ''.'I services 




Ike Wiliittiis 

nsMimg fmcofdwnhthmegmnesitti 



..i%Sic 



FSU 



S^niiKries are lowing their style 

For You: 

A free SeminoieT-Shirt like file one sticiiimgbM nights after 

5 pm when you buy any ffiedhaii or large ^iiefSlyle pi^ 

SuperSlyle purchased). OflBr is good now thnough Deoemiwr 4th. 1 978 at the four Pizza Hut 
lestaurants in Tallahassee. 

For FSU: 

Pizza Hut donate 254 to the Florida State University Athletic Association for each medium or 
large SuperStyle pizza sold on Monday nights dunng the prorDotion penod. (Four Pizza Hut 
restaurants in Gainesville will also be making a donation to the University of Florida Athletic 
Association based on this same method.) The tota. 'lonahon to each Uni¥efBiiy wii tie announced 
December 8th. 

New SuperStyl^Fizza 

The rwme says it ai. Horn when you choose your favonte pizza 
combinahon, just say "SuperStyle. " Savor a pizza that s piled high 
with extra cheese and the toppings you like best. More tasty than 
any pizza you ve tried. And more for the mone^ too. Let yourself go 
. . . SuperStyle. 



Rnit 

1 71 0 W. Tennessee St. 



1241 E. Lafayette St. 201 1 N Monroe St. 
878-1124 385-7636 



3470 Thomasville Rd. 
386-3617 



Cons 
gove 
attra 



by dennis 

The intlanimatorv 
istic of this year's ^ 
the most expensive 
ott'icial close todav 
Kloridians are exp 
decide which milli* ? 
next governor 

Miami lakes 
senator Bob (iraha 
pollsters to make 
Fxkerd's third ir\ 
disappointing as his 
Eckerd ran unsu^ 
Senate against I)u l> 
turned down in a \ 
nomination for u<>\<^ 
Kitk won that r.i> < 
elected governor. 

Both of the latest 
Miami Herald an ' 
Times, howed Grah. 
9-12 percent lead ( 

In typical elect ioi 
candidates predictc 
In a campaign d< 
and other money r 
have promised to cut 
and double the hor 
measote aim^ at () 
homeowners. 

Eckerd has relied 
successful businessn 
while Graham ha 
knowledge of state g 
<>rgawed media cam 
the suave politician 
Eckerd has been 
knowledge of state 
lackluster image. 

Dave Cardwell. < 
electiofis divisloii, p 
he MPomid 60 percer 
pr^naty between < 
Shevin, the turnout 
"A general electi* 
better turiKNit/' Care 
are several statewid 
Cardwell cited th 
referendum as anotht 
is expected. 

Besides retaining 
Democrats are also e 
Cabinet posts. 
# Attorney General e 
<^eated Alan Be 
Democratic prima 
^^WhlLewis won re t 



November 7, 1978 




Sen ing Tallahassee for 66 years 



Elections held today 

Tod^ ii clectioii day throvgbost te 
land, as millions in Florida and clatwiMfc 

flcKk to the polls to record their votes for 
whomever is running for whatever post. 

FSl student Iking on campus should 
bo registered to vote at one of two poUmg 
places if not by al>sentee ballot from back 
home: St. Thomas More Catholk Co- 
Cathedral at the comer of Woodwan 



Constitution revision, 
governor's race, top 
attractions at polls 



by dermis mulqueen 

flambeau staff writer 

The inflammatory rhetoric so character- 
istic of this year's gubernatorial campa'p" 
the most expensive in history, comes to an 
official close today as record numbers of 
Floridians are expected at the polls to 
decide which miUioiuure wiU be the state's 
next governor. 

Miami Lakes developer-dairyman- 
senator Bob Graham is favored by most 
pollsters to make drugstore tycoon Jack 
Eckerd's third try at statewide office as 
disappointing as his first two. 

Eckerd ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. 
Senate against Dick SUme and was also 
turned down in a bid for the Republican 
nomination for governor in 1966. Claude 
Kirk won that race and eventually was 
elected governor. 

Both of the latest polls, released by The 
Miami Herald and The St. Petersburg 
Times, howed Graham with a commanding 
9-12 percent lead over Eckerd. ^ 

In typical election-eve statements, both 
candidates predicted victory. 

In a campaign dominated largely by tax 
and other money issues, both candidates 
have promised to cut government spending 
and double the homestead exemption, a 
measure aimed at providing tax relief for 
homeowners. 

Eckerd has rdied on his reputation as a 
successful businessman and administrator, 
while Graham has capitalized cm his 
knowledge of state government and a well- 
organized media campaign depicting him as 
the suave politician. 

Eckerd has beeu hurt by his lad^ of 
^wledge oi state govemm^t and a 
lackluster image. 

Dave Cardwell, Erector of the st^ 
elections dhrtsion, pre(ficted the tumoiit will 
be around 60 percent. In tiie Dennocratic 
primary between Graliam and Rohat 
Shevin, the turnout was 31.8 percent. 

"A general Section has a history of a lot 
better turnout/* CardweU said, *'and ihete 
are several statewide contests of interest.*' 
Cardwell cited the casino gambling 
referendum as another reason a big turnout 
is expected. 

Besides retaining the governor's chair, 
I>emocrats are alti expected to hold all six 
Cabinet posts. 

Attorney General-elect Jim Smith handily 
tlefeated Alan Becker of Miami in tfie 
Democratic primary, and Comptroller 
Gerald Lewis won re-election in the primary 



by defeating Don Hazelton. Neither Smith 
nor Lewis face RepubUcan opposition on 
today's ballot. 

Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Conner, 
a Democrat, faced no opposition and will 
serve a sixth term. 

The only Cabinet race expected to be 
close is for secretary of state, where polls 
indicate Miami Sen. George Firestone is 
ahead but definitely not a shoe-in over 
Republican challenger Ander Crenshaw of 
Jacksonville^ 

Because of a lack of issues in the contest, 
both candidates have spoken out on matters 
not directly dealing with the office. 

Firestone has stressed the need to attract 
outside industry to the state and improve 
Florida's educational system, while 
Crenshaw has called for doing away with 
run-off elections and limiting campaign 
spending. 

Incumbent Education Commissioner 
Ralph Turlington and incumbent State 
Treasurer-Insurance Commissioner Bill 
Gunter are expected to have little difficulty 
in defeating their unknown GOP opponents. 

Herman Williams is running against 
Turlington and Jeffery Latham faces 
Gunter. 

It will be the last time Floridians pick 
their Cabinet if proposed constitution 
revision 4, also on today's ballot, passes. It 
would abolish the Cabinet and replace it 



Revision 4 is only one of four revisions on 
the ballot which decide the elected versus 
appointed status of state bodies. 

Revision 5 would make for an appointed 
Public Service Commission Revision 6 
would make the state's circuit and county 
judges appointive, as appelate judges are 
now, and revision 8 would make the state 
Board of Education an appointed body. 
Should all four of the revisions pass, the 
governor would appoint the Cabinet, all of 
Florida's judges, the Public Service 
Commission, and the Board of Education. 

All gubernatorial appointments, how- 
ever, would be subject to legislative 
confirmation. 

Revision 2, referred to as a "state ERA. " 
would include the word "sex " in a provision 
already in the state constitution forbidding 
discrimination on the basis of race, religion, 
or physical handicap. 

Revision 7 contains a package of finance 



mm m ELSCTIOHS, fiagm 6 




Alcohol and restrooms: 
What's the connection? 



by jim cox 

flambeau staff writer 

Few ever think of why the alcohol in 
that last drink causes their bodies to flush 
precious internal fluids to the great 
hereafter of sewage life. Fewer still 
wonder why their mouths are dry the 
morning after, or why the entire day 
following a bout with booze is spend in 
mindless ambulation between bed, TV, 
and toilet. 

As we stand, sit, or kneel at those great 
white porcelain gods blurried eyed and 
giggling on a consumptive night, it is 
easy for many to disconcern themselves 
with the deleterious physiological effects 
of alcohol and the strain is too great to 
warrant pursuit of such thoughts in the 
thr(.>es of a hangover. 

The following is a very abbreviated 
description of the physiological side of 
alcohol — the piss and puke side, if you 
will — of how alcohol affects the body. 

The most obvious effect of drinking is 
on the body's liquid content, as obviated 
bv the large amount of time spent by folks 
in most bar restnx)ms. Contrary to what 
many may believe, ih()se beers and mixed 
drinks are not simply going out because 
there is no more rcK)m left inside for the 
liquid to go to. The fact is that alcohol 
indirectly affects the body's main fluid 



regulator, the kidneys, causing them to 
release otherwise retained water 
amounts. The result is that alcohol acts to 
actually dry out the body because of this 
response in the kidney. 

An otherwise closed avenue of fluid 
release is suddenly opened and thus 
provides the reason for the surplus trips 
to the can the night of a drinking bout and 
also the explanation for the dryness of the 
mouth the morning after. 

Alcohol inhibits the release of a certain 
body hormone called vassopressin or 
antidiuretic hormone, which directly 
affects the kidney's control of the internal 
water level. When the hormone is 
inhibited, the entire kidney control 
system is thrown out of whack, 
incidentally affecting both blood 
pressure, causing a to increase, and 
digestion. 

Digestion is further screwed up by 
alcohol because the drug acts to excite 
the release of strong stomach acids. In 
small quantities, alcohol actually aids in 
digestion because of this effect. But when 
alcoloh is consumed in larger quantities, 
the additional acid released only acts to 
irritate the stomach. When alcohol is 



turn to ALCOHOL, pmgm 7 



2 ' Tuesday, November 7 1978 ^LOR'^A c amocai' 



Four issues on ballot for local voters only 




Leon OwntUns win have §om local ' utmtt to decide todiqr: 
ttie letention or replacement ciiMr comat lepmealitife 
to Congress; the annexation of a square mile area mnmd 
Godby High; the retention of appelate judge Woodroir 
Melvin. and the selectio0 of a district five sdiool boofd 
member. 

In the second congressional district . politically dbmemn 
Pete Brathwaite. R-Gainesville. faces awesome odds in 
attempcmg to unseat 16 year congressional veteran Don 
Fuqua. D-Altha. 

Not only has Fuqua benefited from the name recognition 
his incumbent status has offered him. but he has also 
greatly out-spent and out-campaigned his opponent. 



Bratfeiraile lun not liad 
lew iidtoce M C ici i li 
ads for Faqaa. ^tlMMii^ 



spot and only a 
TV and radio 
to identify 



surrounding Godby High, which city planners feel 
necessary to increase the city's income an J tai base. 



1ms fttied to pooe a 
The district fi¥e school 



Crotty has said that the ptoMeas 

School System can be traced to a 
Everett has maintatnrd the sjrslea's 
shortage of available funds. 

Everett is a physical 
a part-ttme aifaitt e d ocathm 
school system. 
The anneaation issue involves a 



nioe pte Sepnhllcmi 
MMCralty. 
of the Leoa Cosaty 
lack of iriaaaing, hat 
afedaatoa 



at FSU; Crotty k. 
in the Leon Goaaty 



square mfle of land 



dahnthecky wiflioi^ 
iBiilipati of the am. who conentiy ose an 

otiKties. woaU rocehpe a <fisoout if the aiea becomes a pin 
of the dty. Estimates have m d icate d the city would kne 
around $4 mflfioa hi w^Mty re venae* if the anaeuLuc 
proposal is approved. 

Also singidar to tha Leon Coanty baDot is whether to 
retain Circuit Judge Woodro^^ Melvin. 

Mel vin formeriy served 2 1 years as a district cx>urt of ippdji 
jad^e in Tallahassee. Because of a constitutional awM^n faea 
patiinf in 1976, detailing a merit retention systeoi hr 
apellate jadges. Mdvia is maamg ^amst hiauelf. 



ERA supporter^ concentrate on four senate seats 



(UPI) — An ex-Marine Corps colonel held prisoner by 
the North Vietnamese for seven years and a former 
astronaut's wife seek election to the House today while 
Equal Rights Amendment fences concentrate on four 
Senate seats. 

All 120 House seats and 20 of the 40 Senate seats are 
on the ballot, although about half of the races already 
have been decided. Two senators and 32 House 
members, including Spealer-elect Hyatt Brown of 
Daytona Beach, drew no opposition. Outgoing House 
Majority Leader John Hill of Miami Lakes was the only 
candidate for the District 33 Senate seat. 

Another 23 House jobs and six Senate posts were 
settled in the primaries. 

Six-year Rep. Frank Williams, D-StarlLe. gets one of 



his toughest challenges ever from Republican Howard 
Dunn of Keystone Heights. Anita Mitchell, R-North 
Palni Beach, wife of ex-astronaut Edgar Mitchell, faces 
West Palm Beach Democrat Gene Campbell, trying to 
return to the House after two year's absence. 

Dunn, captured by the North Vietnamese after his 
Phanton jet crashed, claims to be further to to the right 
than conservative Williams and vows to cut out wasteful 
state spending. 

Mitchell is favored to beat Campbell, partly because 
she won the endorsement of Gov. Reuben Askew. 
Democrat Askew endorsed Republican Mitchell because 
of Campbell's support of casino gambling. 

Campbell wages a shon-lived campaign for governor, 
fighting to legalize casino gambling and earned the 



iddBame, "Ca«oo 6^." 



Florida NOW and other pro-ERA organizations sa\ 
they must win at least two of four targeted Senate races 
to turn around the 21-19 vote by which the amendment 
fell two years ago. They also must avoid upsets of 
pro-ERA candidates by opponents considered token. 

Tlie critical Senate races aie ERA supporter George 
S^urt Jr., D-Orlando, against Jcmny Btener, R- Winter 
Park: Beverly Roberts. D-Clearwatw. trying to ansett 

veteran Se. John Ware. R-St. Petersburg; Rep. Pn 
Frank. D-Tampa. facing David Ray, R-Plant City; md 
Marcia Beach. D-Coral Springs, meeting Rep. Van 

Poole. R-Fort T aud^^^T^e 



Financial aid board 
will look into hassles 



liy dMmi ¥ogt 

assMaMl news editor 

Many of the problems faced by the FSU financial aid 
office were brought out yesterday at the first meeting of a 
newly-appoiirted financial aid board. 

"We «e certainly not now free from a hassle-free 
enviranment, both for students and financial aid 
employees," said Dr. Paul Elliot, director of the FSU 
Division of Academic Support Systems (DASS). 

Elliott added most of the problems stem from the system 
which puts the university in the middle of student 
demands for a hassle-firee system and the federal and ^ate 
governments' need to restrict abase of the system. 

**The university administration has a serious 
conmutment (to financial aid) for the first time," Elliott 
said. Bnt Financial Aid Dnector Ed Marsh called for 
lesttlts, not ccnnmitfl^it. 

''We're trying to pnt two poonds of something into a 
one-poundbag/'isthewiy Marsh de s c ri b ed the worim^ 
of his o^ce. 

"If yoa don't cone op wilii a sofatiofi imfohfiag tome 
hard Inick, or resoorces, then don't add to the fnessore,' 
MmA said, adcMi^, "Oor problem is that the ^iptions 
available (for assist!^ teibmcial aid office) don't seem 



Warehouse 
Haircutters 



Next to 
Sutovway 



RICCOS JAZZ 

Features 
Bill Kennedy Sax 
Lifuist-'v Sargent Pfanq 



Robin 

Ryan 

for 

HOMECONViQ 
VOTE 



Mafsh, citing tbe Uet Us office has had six directors in 
18 years, and tliat he personafly has had tlnee different 
ai^eriois in the FSU adnttnistration<kifii% Ills 3-year stint 
as ^foedor, said Ins office "has snfvived in spite of what 
the university has done." 

**Whfle we're waiting for tfie atiwinistfitfion to dear iq) 
problems, more problems ate being created by tbc 

of financial aid." he 

added. 

The FSU financial aid office has more tiian qm^nipled 
its nnndier of transactions (fronieig^tol2tiioasand) in the 
past four years witiM a sjgntficant change in staff or 







DAVE 
CiU€K£N 












Twix 
succe 



by 

Bean to any gc 
(HC. ym about t( 
haven't made it to 
second and 

By that ttm 
mastenpind Chris 
prime time sp 
Lampodtt's Frat 
ptottiog iiftinst 
tinowing a beast 
younger brother t 

But that's next 

Yesterday, Mi 
campus to deliver 
Funny?" and tak 
conference to di 
success of the mo 

Animal House, 
mythical Fabcr Co 
$80 million and 
Students to yrab t 
trek to the in*.! ea^ 

"Before we even 
there would be tog 
**But 1 never dre 
generated at every 

Miller, a studer 
m the carlv sixties 
unlike "American 
attempts to tell the 
life. 

"I always felt t 
about the past; th 
every nostalgic f 
better that it is now 
was just as suckv 
\^as just a differ 
operation." 

"Animal House 
truer way than r 
Graffiti." he n< 

As a product c 

12 Beat 

St . 

(ZNS) — Amcri 
the Beatles will so 
speciaDy^bosed 

L-Fs whkh capitol 
be releasing as 
editions.** 

The collection b 
fdude 12 of the 
■M|k|ai is desci 
alottm contain! 
unreleased Beatles 



FLORIDA PLAMBEAU Tuesday. November 7. 1978 3 




> I 
t 

* i 
I 




Chris Miller s moods 




Twixt film and fiction after 
success of Animal House 



by jeff mangum 

flambeau staff writer 

Been to any good beast parties lately? 
OK. how about toga parties? Well, if you 
haven't made it to any of the first, go to the 
second and check back next year. 

By that time **Animal House" 
mastermind Chris Miller will have his own 
prime time spinoff, "The National 
Lampoon's Frat Rats,'* on a netwoik 
plotting against the rival Omegas and 
throwing a beast party to welcome Bluto's 
younger brother to Faber CoUege. 

But that's next year. 

Yesterday, Miller was on the FSU 
campus to deliver a lecture entitled **Is Sex 
Funny?" and take time out for a press 
conference to discuss the ^leiioiiieiial 
success of the movie he co-wrote. 

Animal House, an account of frat life at 
mythical Faber CoUege in 1%2 has grossed 
$80 million and prompted thousands of 
students to grab the nearest bed sheet aa^ 
trek to the increasingly popular toga fests. 

' 'Before we even shot ^ movie, I hoped 
there woidd be toga parte," Miller said^ 
"But 1 Inevo: dreamed . they woidd h# 
generated at every campus.*' 

MiOtr, a stmlent at Dartmouth College 
in the eaily sixties said "Animal House/' 
unlike "Americm Gnillti" aad "Grease," 
attempts to tell the truth about 1%2 college 
life. 

'i ahvays felt that everyone was lyteg 
•bout the past; that there was a big lie in 
every nostalgic fto; thpt the past was 
better that it is «ow," Miller observed. "It 
was just as sucky aad wefrd as today. It 
was just n dlfierent set of variables in 
operatiott." 

"Aninial House sort of tells the past in a 
truer way than movies like (American) 
Graffiti." he noted. 

As a product of the Alpha Delta Phi 



fraternity at Dartmouth, Miller said he 
drew on a good deal of personal history for 
the ** Animal House" screenplay, which 
originally ran four hours. 

"We were a lot like the Deltas . . . only 
we were grosser than that and probably not 
as nice," Miller said. 

The 36 year old writer said he considered 
his brothers "a bunch of politely middle 
class male youth, kind of vomiting up their 
polite upbringing and being as crazy, wild, 
gross and insane as they could be." 

After whittling the original screenplay 
down to a more manageable two hours, the 
production company set out for the Sigma 
Nu house at the Univei^ty of Oregon to 
film Animal House. 

*'We went in there with our scunge guns 
and really messed the place up for two 
weeks," Miller said. 

"They wanted their house clean for 
homecoming, but if they'd known what a 
ph^iomeoon the movie would be, they 
probably would have kept it that way," he 
added. 

Miller said he has already penned "a 
damn funny pSot" for television, albeit 
with a few changes to make the transition 
from cinema to TV screen. 

"Bluto's been thrown out (tf school and 
is in Korea in Army intelligeace," Miller 
said. 

"Plato has a new girlfriend. Muff, who 
kind of takes tiie place of Katy and Oorette 
DeP^»to ... we had to do some concentration 
of characters" to make the switch. Miller 
said. 

The opening segement of "Frat Rats" 
welcomes Bluto's transfer studeat brother 
to Faber College with a "Beast" party, 
something Miller said mvolves teewing 
cauldrons of punch, pledges canymg kegs 
of beer over their shoulders, and the 
fictitious Deltas clothed in **Beast" outfits. 



12 Beatl^ albums to be released 



(ZNS) — American and British fans of 
the Beatles will soon be able to purchase 
specially-boxed collections of Beatles' 
L-F s which capitol and E-M-I records will 
be releasing as "special collector's 
editions." 

The collection being sold in England will 
include 12 of the Beatles' studio albums, 
plus whai is described as a new "rarity" 
album containing many previously 
unreleascd Beatles' recordings. 



The E-M-1 collection will be limited to 
only 5000 copies and will be sold for a steep 
$100 each. 

Capitol records report it will release a 
similar beatles' collection in the Uaited 
States within two we^. and that It will 
limit its edition to just 3000 copies. The 
U.S. Beatles' package will be sold in a 
"Royal Blue Box." The price — while high 
— has yet to be disclosed. 



HAVE AN AFFAIR 

AT Hunrs 

JAZZ BY THE 
"SOUND AFFAIR" 



<MAMRICKo 




WeVe new in 
town, iindC WC ^ ^ 
Want Bit$iness/^\^ 

%e Si{i?er fine 

is aSoui tffc most 

uj>todi^ y "u^ stairs'^ 

s^cj> — to e^er nttst 



stained ^U$s ,jf€tt€ru 
Custom design, in 






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Florida 

|i,.ip% If J ^'1 

111^ 




Elections 




Edacaiioii. State Treasurer, repfetentatives to Coogress, 
Md decide on a siough of k>ca] referenda and candidates, 
ifl addition, nine proposed revisions to the state 
eu mikuikm ate tacfaided oo the battot — eight of them set 



: ' - tin 



ganMtng. the product of mmdustrious pack of seipentine 
lovers of the buck. 
Making that many decisions should gi\e fits to the 
ive, as they fiad fhrmtdvet isototgd in the polling 
dtft^ss dcawB« hot U pmmies to be a good time 
lor those of us who pcoi»s to be proponeiits of a 
democracy. 

The right to vote is. of course, a fundamental tenet of a 
republican government; there is cause for celebration 
whenever we eiercise that r^t. 

Segietably. only J5 percent of those eligibk aie 
tegistefcd to vote m today's election, and of that 35 
percent, aboot half are expected at the polls, giveor takea 
percentage point or two. 

So. to be liberal with the figures, about 20 percent of the 
^gibk voters in the state of Florida will today decide u ho 
governs ns for the next two to four years, and the 
substsnoe of mndi of the oonstituticm by which the ^ate is 
run. That responsibility is positively awesome. 

In the primary run offs in early October, it appeared 
many local students weren't really av^are of that 
responsSniity^ either that or one hell of a lot <tf absentee 
ballots were cast. At the two polls near campus, in the 
October run-off. an abysmal 597 votes were recorded. 

Now granted, in addition to absentees, many students 
undoubtedly vote in other precincts, but that figure in 
comparison to the number of students at FSU — some 
22,000 — is damned paltry and somewhat suspect. 

Are stndei^ even less re^onsible voters than the rest 
of the population? 

The last student government elections would indicate as 
much: fewer than 3.000 turned out to vote in that one. and 
no more are expected in the run-offs for student senate 
seats this Wednesday. 

In e»iy October, we decided k was too early to tefl 
whether student voters are an apathetic lot this year, 
whether they could care more or less than persons outside 
the universities. After tomorrow, we should be in a 
position to make some assessment, and we hope it's not as 
ifisappointi^ as we are ^raid it might be. 



FiOftOa Flambeau ^O'j'^da^iop 'nc. btisir^ess ^''■'i .■'^'^ <^ -e 206 N. 
WcKxJward Avenue, pr>on€ 644-4075; NewsfCXXTi 204 . >cx3«vara Avenue, 
phone 644^5505; Production /Mediatype iab 314 Un .e s ry Union, phone 
644^44; Classified ad office 306 Universfty Union, phone 644-5786. Matting 
•Mnm. P.O. %m U-TOOI, HoM StM tlniMraiiy, Tililiiiiiii y, FloridL 

Stev^ Watkins Editor 

Beth Rudowifce , 

ItaBiiVoct 

Afts/Fi 

General Manager 

Ifichad White Advertising Manager 

Bob Shearer Production Manager 

Jane Duncan Mediatype Manager 

Laurie Jones .Business Manager 

DawnStiyhfnfieki Office Coordinator 



Craps with the legislature 



Small Change 



by Sidney bedingfield 

As a Florida resident for less 
than three years, I'm ashamed to 
say that I have yet to make my 
way to the poUs — until the 
elections today. 

The reason for my past apathy 
stems from a combination of 
laziness, a feeling that my vote 
uould be meaningless and. 
primarily, the lack of any 
candidate or movement stimulat- 
ing enough to produce more than 
a casual **Yeah. I agree with 
that,** or *I will probably vote for 
him." 

But the situation has reversed 
itself for the elections today 
because of casino gambling and 
the propaganda that has 
surrounded it. 1 will take time 
today from my classes to go to the 
polls, wait in line if necessary and 
pull the lever for what I hope \vt1I 
be one of a majority of "no'* 
votes. 

Before the tragically hip 
immediately equate me with the 
Bible-beating religious groups 
also opposing the proposition, I 
v^ant to make it clear that I have 
no moral problems with gambling 
— in fact. I enjoy a little chancy 
speculation as much as anyone — 
but 1 do have problems with the 
interests and intentions of the 
group pushing for casino 
gamblmg in Florida and their 
subsequent effect on the state if 
alU»\* ed to sot up shop. 

I here is little doybt that 



casinos will be enormoasly 

successfol m Florida — as they 
have been in New Jersey. In fact, 
they will be so successful that 

gambling will likely outstrip just 
about every other industry dollar- 
wise, thus looming over the state 
as the biggest money-maker and. 
therefore, the most pov^erful 
interest group. 

Now the plot thickens. With 
bundles of green at their disposal, 
the casino gambling interest — 
\^hether one believes they are 
associated with organized crime 
or whether one even cares — will 
be in the enviable position of 
being able to write their own 
ticket in the Florida legislature, 
possibly owning that body lock, 
stock and barrel in, say, 10 to 20 
years. 

Wielding that sort of power in 
the upper echelons of state 
government, and m^Ht^ the soft 
of profits casinos are sure to 
make, it is doubtfnl these 
benevolent ol* £rnticnB that 
have sudde^ taken an interest 
in the quality of education in 
Florida w ill be content with a strip 
of land along the Gold €oi^. 
Instead, they will be in a position 
to start rolling up one coast and 
do^Ti the other, all the winle 
promising better law enforce- 
ment, better educatioB Ml, hi 
and behold, bigger, more 
stupendous, aH-OMisiimttig tai 
breaks. 

Well. !rfNiie of tiiese promises 
may come tne. witii tbe state 



added rcscmt. la 
I'm skeptical the small sbort-teni 
ffom wii offiKt the loBg-terai Im 
of having the state fomfy witfea 
the vise grip of a saafl ioteiat 
griHip reaping astrosoaictl 
profits — thas astroaomicti 
power — ftvra casnos. Is Fkxidi 
in soch financial straits that w 
must resort to this sort of txwk- 
off? 

Yet. there is an argument thil 
people want to gamble, and 
therefore, in the spirit of 
libertanan democrat), shouiu 
allowed 10 legally do so in tiie 
state of Flonda. The problem with 
that kind of logic is that it doesn't 
focus on who really benefits from 
legalized gambling. While i 
personally don't care if somerr. 
wants to throw a\^ay monev d do 
it as often as possible). 1 do .an 
what is done with thai mone% 
after it has been taken, and ! ^ 
against defending the lo>^ 
consumers" right to throw monev 
into the pocket of a few profit- 
hungry casino magnates Simpi) 
said, let the gamblers go tc 
Atlantic City, or bener vet. keep 
the bookies in business - 't 
icaDy more fon when it s 
anyway. 

And if there are a fe^ nane 
people that believe pro a ' 
forces are foridng out rnilH ^ 
dollars on an ad campa 
because they think the children 
Flonda deserve a bet^^r educa 
tion. they they will alsi) heli 
church groups when the^ 
the farv of the lord will des 
on Florida and burn it into a hca^ 
of charred ruins if gambling »^ 
legalized. ^ 
So there's the choice. Fk)i^ 

defeii legalized gan*lii»g ^ ^ 
the lire! 



SG 



Prop<isals to in 
various countries to- 
FSU graduates m f 
finance an on ( uti] 
suggestions ' 
funding th«s vc^: 

••Wc have surer si 
to procure grant n imi 
student govern (lu III 
Friedman said. 

New clas; 



Two new courses 
students. 

In the humanities 
will he tauj^l 
supplement his led 
in K(M>m ^22 VVilhai 
1 hursilass fn>m 1 
A history course 
I \sia Through 189*> 
uiarter. 



Aid 



from 



The student aid 
eek. eiftending fmj 
FSU fads as manv 
The financial aid 
and administrators, 
now associated wr 
student govemmeni 

*i hope we can 
students or admii 
imimiving financia 
The top three 
fomulatton of a 
revialiig the studen 
emergency procedi 
pffohlems. 

**Sofne students 
sti^ time to solve. 

The financial 
recommenda 



per lood 



LAUNMOi 

T cum 

1934 W. Itmi 

l»wt 

IIm4 ta 

Drop off 

%4o\ 



Boot Print h 



FSU Union 
644-1848 




FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Ti 




SG will choose from grant proposals 



November 1, 1978 / S 



by rich bose 

HambMu writer 

Proposals to invite United Nations ambassadors from 
various countries to the FSU campus to study the success of 
FSUgnduates in finding jobs in their fif Ids of study, and to 
finance an on-campus daycare center are a few of the 
suggestions student government is copidering for graqt 
funding this year. 

"We have successfully concluded the initial steps needed 
to procure grants from federal, state and private sources for 
student government projects/' student boify J^esideut Neal 
Friedman said. 

New classes offered at FSU 



Two new comfMs wUl be offered in the winter for FSU 

students. ' 

In the humanities department, the Ascent of Man (HUM 
3930) will be taught by Dr. David H. Darst, who will 
supplement his lectures with television films. It will meet 
in Room 322 Williams on Tuesdays from 12:20-2:15 and on 
Thursdays from l:25-2rlS p.m. 

A history course. Imperialism and Revdution in East 
Asia Through 1899 (ASH 4385), will alsoW offered next 
quarter. 



Human Conservation Associates Inc.. the noo-prafit 
social service consulting firm employed by SG this yctf k 
handling the actual writing of tte pnH for 

For that wvestMat, SG bopes to obtiiB a wnafamim of 

$50,000. 

Grants writer Lmdoo Stem of HCA laid be is optbmstk 
about attaining the goal. 

"The real test will rest wMi stndort govenmeiit ^ler tbe 
funds are received.** Storm said. 

"If the funds are managed pr oper ly it will enhance tbe 
chances of obtaining additioiiid grants in the fatnre." 

When all of the proposals are ia, the five that are 
considered to be the most important wffl be adected for 
application. 

''Prioritization of tbe proposals win be done by myself, 
the SG senate president, vioe-fieskfont, and Mr. Storm/' 
Friedman said. 

Otfier ^:oposals submitted indaded: 

• A CannonbaU Adderly Jazz Festival 

• Funding for the student-sponsored PUywright's Theatre 



• A plan to InvUe top flta 
works 



to FSU to scieen tbeir 



wvims 

* Aid to CPE Hi ei^emttn^ Its pwyaiB to off-CMqpM 

locatioBs 



Kill II null 



via 



• More noney for 
Clear-view cable aooesi 

• Funding for a conferenoe on the anlbropolnirBl reafily of 
matriarchy and Hi effect en society 

• Pending of a pn|ect dealing wilii nmltl ptoMenM 
common in a university en r li en n ient 

with proposed remedial dwnfwi 

• Studyii^ the long range effiseli of **Tltfo QT* on FSU 

athletics 

• Studying tbe effects of leasing on dormitory Kfo 
Friednian expressed oonoem that most of the proposals 

submitted cane firon eitlierfocelty response or binself. and 
said he is still seeking student ideas. 

A public meeting to discuss p t iotHix atlon of tbe proiects 
wifl be held on Nov. 14 at 2 p.m. in Room 2S2 Union. 



Aid 



from panel 



The student aid bill signed by President Carter last 
week, extending financial aid to the middle class, means 
FSU faces as many as 6,000 more transactions next year. 

The financial aid board, composed of students, faculty, 
and administrators, aims to elinimate many of the hassles 
now associated with financial aid. It was appointed by 
student government and DASS. 

1 hope we can come up with some kind of ideas, as 
students or administrators, about possible ways of 
improving financial aid here at FSU,'* Elliott said. 

The top three priorities before the board are: the 
tornuilation of a financial aid information brochure, 
revising the student responsibility form, and devising an 
emergency procedure for students with financial aid 
problems. 

Some students' problems cost $5,000 of administrative 
staff time to solve," Elliott said. 

The financial aid board will eventually make 
recommendations to the administration on financial aid. 



S|)»'n(] an evening with 

me, at 

RiiCO'S 



Piano Bar 



UN DA 



ABAC AUTO PARTS I 
Student Discounts 
809 W. Madison St. 
222-4270 



RICCO'S 




r Wing of the 
n Southern Aire 




per lood of 

UNIVERSITY 
LAUNMOiAAT 
A 

DRY CUANIRS 
1934 W. TMMtite 
Next to Se wi wol e 

Need te Stady? 
Drop off 

«d we'l do it! 
Best Print ii TmtbI 




FSU Union 
644-1848 




^ 





^erfqqD 



5021 W. TENNESSEE 

NEXT TO COURTESY OlDS 

FRESH CRACKED BACK OYSTERS $1.00 57A.^ft7 

32 OZ. PITCHER DRAFT BEER $.75 

FRIED SCALLOPS . ..... $3.95 



^^^^ 





• • • 



'i- ';-'.-: :-: \ * 



.^•^?*.5y^*^?«<•^V5•i^%•:•.•<^^■•:•■-s 



BLS 3101 
T 2:30 - %20 
R 230 - 425 
67 Bellamy 



instructor : Dr. William R. Jones 
Director, Black Studies 



Objectives oi Course 

Upon completion of the course, the student should have: 

1. a working knowledge of an interpretive category (conceptual and 
sociai scientific) that is required for an accurate understanding on 
the adaptive responses of Afro-Americans 

2. a systematic understanding of tlie t>eltef and value components, 
institutional structures and inner logic of racism/oppression 

3. a comparative analysis of racism, sexism, and anti-semitism 

4. an assessment of the adequacy and accuracy of tmic 

interpretations of the nature and role of racism 



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SfZe CALL mSiit «r*<«r 4 Hgpim 





FSU 







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«t'*ws ♦e^? tor 
OAAFT OK 

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CAifOWAL /• ► /' »»iiWS4 CALL 



WAHTEtj A /MM fLA/EP TO 
«l>^0#^ AT A rUlVATI ^AUTY 

aM.L722?77f 



TO THE LOViMO FUll 
SUP^OttTED iMY MiEF' BUT 
EXClTlMe CAJMPAIGM FO« 
iMAJirrTHAMKS, 

PS. GOOO LUCK TO LYHM 

HAMff iCr AMD CO STRfCKt 
YO'J'VE 3C'w GOT my VOTE' 





Typiwo 



IBM COi 



«EWA»D T = sres 

QC'i :if" e't*r. f*r-4 € "< 
s«cn or foyms :» 




OVUIMAS JOSS - Svm«*Mr fif»l 
fifft0. thtfppt) % A#w#ric#/ A<##lr#li#, 

C«fvt«r, StM 449»^Fft Berkeley, CA 



»y/ Citfr K» «rr/#Kip«s tfvffcd •«d 
»fiftr»%^ Writ* B«r><0 

enrt«fpr»M«, Bm SMI, AiMfin, TX. 

mptkkm 



Mf«c |»«p«ft, (Itt9erf , mM Linda 




''11 
'IP 




G*tc»ych«| Love, 
The o# Delta Tau Odts 



GEORGE FRfSOM 
wrr« warming up 



LOST I 
:OvL!E MiXJMED- SIZE 
TRi COLORED <^IOSTLY BLK 
LONG HAIR ANSMrERS TO KILO 
LOST tH MYERS PK AREA 
PLEASE CALL m-W 

lost gold lil' sis f>m 
nf or near d4ff contact 
cimoy: 



TheOamma PMa 



non, cvt A Mow dry S4.S0. Acid 
balance parms tlS.OO. Hanna't 
ro.jtrai Of color 17 00 f»Krf hair or 
>9 00 for long hair. Ail work by 
%fu dmt§ m0tr M#parv)»4on of qmaii- 
red inttrvctort. TaH. Collage of 
Barber ttyliftg. 1231 Appalachaa 
^ Caff m w» for ai#t. Oiiag 
MofKiay*. 

AFFLIANCSS 

Will buy end or haul off your 
apptiancp'i ^ j>i V'ir%h«ll days 
f9t-7t7f (poctiet beeper) evenings 
m-MM LfCBMSSO 



GA//y/A PHI BETA Matrass AAan, 
George Prison, 

You'ra Wo. 1 Af a yOM raarty for baJ? 

MATTRESS MAM OMNlOe 
PRISON, 

WtLovaYou, 

The Gamma Phis 



TO ALL A«y SUPPORTERS — 
TMANX I HOPE FOR YOUR 
CONTINUED SUPPORT 
PRINCESS RUNOFF WEOS lid 
ROBIN RYAN 

DEAR SIGMA KAPPAS — 

THE PHI TAUS SAY — 

LET S DO IT FOR HOMECOMING 



Z IT 




Progr 




Student and facu 
jUMne ^triight facts 
alcohol abu^e froi 
offered by the office 

ml FSU. 

The Akxihol Al 
Program and Int< 
located ni KiH>m 3^1 
concerned with ediic| 
the proper use ot aU 

FSU has rtH rived 
University of V\ot\\ 
program whuh air- 
alcohol ipf 

l^te dfifiwig ijattci 

of abuse among 
swarded a federal 
weW as the Uni> 
piorida. Florida A 
aod nine pnvau h 
htvc been sub-conn 
up information scrN 

"We're concern ( ».| 
r^ht answers to tht 
Dave Per^y. cooi 
■ f II 



Alcohi 

cottfiM with the 
coasnned while 
seen strewn out 

Less obviotts ai 
Mid Bmct where 
abuse have been 
ability to destroy 
areas where most 
the hippocampus. 
cereb^Uum whe| 
coordinatioo are 

According to n 
braddng fibers 
communicatioo 
effects of such 
memory loss tha* 



In Brie 

A RESUME v\ 
hold by CClS tontghj 
Boom 110 Bryan H 

THE CPE BELLY 
beginners will resui 
7:30 in the Florida Rc| 

FSU^*«NEW** V 
of students an i 
EiperieBce is not 
persons can attend 
7:30 in Room 255 I 

mCHMOGY ( 
idght is sponsored 
Clii in Room 201 
aies uiteresteo in 
studies ave mvited t< 
tht FSU psycholog 

IBSOm llflEl 
bicycles register^ 
Dep artmen t of Publi 
to Room 031 w 
between 1 and 4 p 

cxmecnoNs 

student govemmf 
tome cirforB and 



n 



m 




FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Tuesday, Novembar 7. 1978 / 7 



Program Has dope on booze 



Student and faculty can now get 
some straight facts about alcohol and 
alcohol abuse from a new service 
offered by the office of student affairs 

at FSU. 

The Alcohol Abuse Prevention 
Program and Information Center, 
located in K(X)m 303 Bryan Hall, is 
concerned with educating drinkers on 
the proper use of alcohol. 

FSU has received $9,800 from the 
University of Florida to fiind the 
program which already has a large 
alcohol information center to investi- 
gate drinking patterns and the extent 
of abuse among students. UF was 
awarded a federal grant, and FSU as 
well as the University of South 
Florida, Florida Atlantic University 
and nine private Florida institutions 
have been sub-contracted by UF to set 
up information services. 

"We're concerned with giving the 
right answers to the questions," says 
Dave Persky, coordinator for the 



center, **not prohibition but educa- 
tion." Persky is currently working on 
his doctorate in educational leader- 
ship. 

Working with Apalachee Communi- 
ty Mental Health Center. Persky is 
setting up a referral service for people 
who need counseling for akohol abuse 
problems. 

He plans to hold meetings with FSU 
organizations to stir up awareness for 
the program. The objective of this 
service, he says, is to let the student 
know that there is a proper way to 
enjoy drinking without getting sick or 
letting alcohol become a habit. The 
center will host a Responsible 
Drinkers Party at Reynolds HaU 
tomorrow evening at 8. 

According to Persky, between 90 
knd 95 percent of college students 
nationwide are drinkers. Of these, 
roughly 15 percent are heavy drinkers, 
consuming more than one drink four 
or more nights a week. While no 
figures are available yet on the 
drinking rates at FSU, Persky adds. 



Dave Persky 



•*We strongly believe FSU students 
fall in with the national norm." 

Despite the increased availability of 
marijuana and other drugs, Persky 
says, "Research has shown that 
alcohol is still the drug of choice" 
among college students. 

The center will collect data on the 
drinking patterns of FSU students to 
obtain a clearer picture of the extent of 
drinking and abuse. Most heavy 
drinkers fail to recognize their 
problem or won't admit it, he says, 
making identification and treatment 
difficult. 



Alcohol 



from page 1 



coupled with the many hard to digest foods often 
consumed while drinking, the results may typically be 
seen strewn out for public view. 

Less obvious are the ill-effects of alcohpl on the brain 
and liver where most of the long-term results of alcohol 
abuse have been noted. In the brain, alcohol has the 
ability to destroy valuable, irreplaceable brain cells, the 
areas where most of this damage occurs seems to be in 
the hippocampos, a memory and leammg region, and the 
cerebellum where body balance and muscular 
coordination are controlled. 

According to leccttt studies, alcohol destroys the 
braching fibers of nerve cells, or dendrites, whkh aid 
commoaicatkHi between diese cells. The kmg-term 
effects of such damage may be associated with the 
memoiy loss that plaques hard core akxrfidics. Among 



social or "weekend drinkers," however, association with 
poor test grades, and forgetting birthdays and 
anniversaries has not been directly linked with akohors 
physiological effects. 

The liver has long been the center of many doctor's 
focus when considering the internal complications 
associated with drinking. The liver is a center of 
metabolic activity also involved in sup|rfying key 
enzymes necessary for intestinal digestion. 

A build-up of fats occurs in the liver in association with 
alcohol which can lead to a hardening, or sclerosis, of this 
vital organ. If this hardening process is taken to 
extremes, the liver's crucial function in digestion is 
impaired and may become so drastically hindered that 
body functions experience a cessation of all activity, i.e. 
one*s nose won't breath, one's eyes won't see, and one's 
muscles begin to shrivel and stink. 



The Peace Corps 

Vbu can be proud of it \bu can be part of it 
For inforauilioii, edi 644-3241 
or come by room 417, Sandek, FSU 



AM Ihoae d»hm you've heard about but n evf 

ptvparad by exscutiva chaf Rm 
Tuaaday, 11-2 fun. 

English barlay aoup 
salad, skiUerv salad, endive with avoctdS 
Carved Steamship round, beef sukiyaki 
Black forest caka, baked alaska 
AlpNetaalicarti 




Hairstyles you oM Iw hi 

1^ west Tenneasee • 224-6609 



In Brief 



A RESUME WUHNG CSJNIC wUl be 
held by CCIS tonight from 6:30 to 7:50 in 
Room 110 Bryan HaU. 

THE CFETBEIXY DiyPHiX COURSE for 
beginneis will resume meeting tonight at 
7:30 in the Florida Room of the FSU Union^ 

FSU'S^'*NEW" YEARBOOK is in need 
of students aad faculty workers. 
Experience is not necessary. Interested 
persons can attend a meetkg toiu^ at 
7:30 in Room 2SS Union. 

PSYCHOLOGY GRAMJAIE SCHOOL 
night is sponsored t«»igfat at 7:30 by Psi 
Chi m Room 201 Longmke. Undogradn- 
ates interested in enrolKng in graduate 
studies are invited to hear fmiessors from 
the FSU psychology departmei^ 

PilSIHiS DfimBSm fai liavhig tiiek 
bicycles' registered with the FSU 
Department (tf PttUlc Safety can take them 
to Room 031 Westcott any Tuesday 
between 1 and 4 p.m. 

CCmUCnONSt Mmulay's listing of 
student government winners contained 
some enots and omissicms. Arts and 



Sciences seat four went to David Lazarus of 
United Seminoles; kt\s and Sciences seat 
two will be decided by a run-off 
Wednesday between Sylvia Clayton of 
United Seminoles and Esther Reichkind of 
Action; and Peggy Droz of Action Party 
was elected Alunmi Council vice president. 



In Brief policy: The Flambeau In Brief section, because 
or limited specs, does not print notices of regular 
me e t i ng s or m e m ber s hip groups. Unless pre-registration 
is required, morning events will t)e announced ttie 
previous day and afternoon and evening events ttie same 
(ley es ttiey occur. Only one notice will be run of each 
event, and all events must be open to ttie public. Notices 
will not be taken by telep»»one, but must be mailed le The 
Flambeau at FSU Box U 7001 or delivered to ttie 
Flambeau office at 204 N. Woodward Ave. by 1 p.m. the 
deyberorelheyareduetorun. AH notices should include 
day, time, place, cost, If any, and a contact number for 
The Flambeau. All items are subiect fo standard editing. 




Considerable cloudiness slated for today 
and tomorrow, with a chance of showers 
and a few thundershowers. Some early 
morning fog is likely today. Lows will be 
mostly in the mid 50s tonight, with highs in 
the upper 70s tomorrow. Rain probability is 
40 percent today and tonight. 



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Wed. 11/8, lhan. 11/f 



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1,1 



S ports 



Moore finished second even after 
sprainin^ ankle on shoddy course 



i tu^y ^xmm swept tlMr k»=t S ea _ 



tiicir iBafi fw the 



^ 1 p jm. on Ike ttl fieiii. 



Sports In Brief 



Tbe 



**$lie^ fus* tna* kinc pf:n<&. Uaiua tfum flit ike 

T"haT s the type of ac^jotaOe jtjitar Pau Torar uved ic 
ikrscnbe th*r pcrionnanLt: of Katnv Muo-t ia r Saturaa> ie 
Atlanii a* P*rj{tw 11? '.-^.'S'l '_t>u?ii''\ met", ii. that meet,, 
Mr/ " ^ • r.c t>*;t:L iftt nunit/w UDt runntr for Torar] i 
m^u<x'. . . sprain'j^ ^ter ankie hareK a thmi (rf the wi^ 
iBIc tht race, yet hun^ lo fiaiiii second 

7>i» »n|ury occured 
Tu'fcr • untmj^ *: i*rtteT of prmT!,! to 
Cu^erec witn lalJ graM. itnawBttored by 
the unirv highways and laid out oo tiie side of 

**Ju«t before the first mile 1 rtcfpcd ifll0 a hoie. it 
kxilbedlikefobdgroitiid. but itiiMD*t.** rinniir rffiaiif nt 
"it dMi't haft ito bad liiCT. bats MltlewlKie later, as we 
were oooaaof down to a late, I 
% tiMfl it was httftiog pretty b^" 

Moofc had to reltnqitish her 



As 



6at, father than rm ia foia. 

1 isMMidefed 'it Cnr a flMimeot, 
4kAm*t lamm horn tlK test of the ie 
il^tfed I cmMmkmmmium ay 

qualify/' 

Moore was nrjffgri j f ie foal i ^i i g 
hM IP fioiili one or two hi Ae 
ootioitaJ oieet. 
As sh^ ^utMM aat, Moore did 
r« (FSII loiifead msasmd) bat 




last wfsciteiid 34-7 to 'Op 'its Mseoed id S-O. Tn* -ear 
to Atioata tios w ae to i d ie p% m in . ..^ 
luuriuoBeat. 

« • • 

The FSU uumt-r ^ soix-er ten wffl hn.;-- 
t\ axic Triun»aaj» ai j.Ji. j-.ii.. ob the i..y 



The Far Bafl tacquetbali loumsroen* v 

%ktrtriLt;iic .'I :he Salter Hal! couns Tfit 

the first ev«i; anc Sr for the seconc e -n: 

unerested shouuc stop oy the IM Qcpaaxn»sn\ 



t Jtaris Kcstau:„ 



Lunch Mem 



ieihe 



Kati^ Moore 

ur^ury makes hef qt estkHiMef Of naimais 



1 - 



Ma- S — ^ricd Speckled TtDwrt 



3,75 



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to FSU 



ie IIms f#ffffff ef Tocaa jied 



"^rU be teady. I doB*t iirteiid lo 



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Student DistXMints I 
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IS ALIVE AND 
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HOMECONtlG PRINCESS 

von WED 





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1 1 HOME GAME SEASON Tl 
2 Simlefils %\5Gum* 

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Limited number of 
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CROSS CUT SAW 

WANTS YOU TO KNOW THAT 
IIIBeAV 1$ BLUES fiAY 

TOMMT'S 

4W W. TsM. St. 
to join Hwa for on 



MEMffSI 
PAT JUMttY 

nqr«- Mi VMiist wM 
ViMsr Mdl TnMBi) 

fm, H tM mm. 



VAUOATEO lOaeOUIREO 



MAM 



{Hz 




Serving Talh 




by 



MIAMI — W 

Graham, a on 

singU ii out by P 
new political ^ 

heavens." was 
governor yesterdj 

draham. a llaH 
(It vt'loper an 
f I M I f t s . h a u I < 
. lik kcns to eras< 
intelk-ctiial. dote 
tvcoon Jack I tkc 
of his own wcaltl 

With 77 percen| 
(irahani had a SS 
l-ckcrd which trj 
lead of more tli.i 

Graham said 
years of exciting. | 
— a new relation: 
and the [)eople " 

He said he was 
into state serv u 
people. We want 
make the commit 
better for all of ui 

Fckerd. in concj 
home to bed. fioi 
* 'there's been a 
his congratulation! 
all need to ^et be] 

The witty, artw 
sections of the si 
Pensacola. scormi 
Penhmdlc and inl 



Revi 



n ' 



MIAMI <UPI 
propose! to maki 
state with leg: 
yesterday, tiimtni 
phut to put casin 
south Florida's ^ 

Floriditns ah 
Constitutioo Rcm 
sals, standing fn 
against an app 
Comnilssion and 

The casuM> vtct 
career of Gov 
appeared before j 
headquarters of t¥ 
worked with him 
9. The Mendmi 
gaming hooaes alo 




Bean, laid 
I a., last wcelicntj 

r^e lady ruggers 
p and they wii 
|he IM fields 



[er Winter Park 
he team travels 
the Peacht 



ret 



hold practitc 
N IM field. 

fill be held this 
py fee is $4 for 

event. Those 

Lnt. 



itaut 

em 



H ond Solod Bar 



II.SO 



ken . 



3.00 



3.00 



2.95 



Yt wMm South 



MAT 



BAND 



nil 






tfm precmcts f^>af^ng in statewide 

■mem, ami af mtwm in on focal 
Actions. 



Bob Gmham 
Jack Eckerd 



45% 



Graham takes it 



George Fh^stam 

enshaw 



47% 



State TreamiwP^' 



by torbara fryo 

INiitod prvss infvnMttaiMl 

MIAMI — Millionaire Democrat Robert 
Graham, a once obscure state senator 
singled out by President Carter as "a bright 
new political star flashing across the 
heavens." was elected Florida's 38th 
governor yesterday. 

Graham, a Harvard-educated Miami land 
developer and dairy farmer who scrubbed 
toilets, hauled garbage and plucked 
chickens to erase his image as an urbane 
intellectual, defeated Republican drugstore 
tycoon Jack Eckerd who invested $2 million 
ot his own wealth in the campaign. 

With 77 percent of the precincts counted, 
Graham had a S5 to 45 percent margin over 
Eckerd which translated into a whopping 
lead of more than 190,000 votes. 

Graham said his election "means four 
years of exciting, challenging years ahead 
— a new relationship between government 
and the people." 

He said he was issuing a call "to bring 
into state service a new generation of 
people. We want the best of this state to 
make the commitment to make this state 
better for all of us/' he said. 

Eckerd, in conceding, said he was going 
home to bed, hoping to wake up to find 
"there's been a miracle." But he offered 
his congratulations to Graham, saying, **we- 
all need to get behind our governor.** 

The witty, articulate Graham swept all 
sections of the state, fix)m Key West to 
Pensacola, scoring big in the conservative 
Panhandle aad Iiiterslate-4 oHrridor where 




Wayne Mixson (left) and Bob Graham 



Republicans generally do well. 

Eckerd, 65, had to be satisfied with small 
leads in a dozen and a half counties, 
including Charlotte, Citrus. Lake, Manatee, 
Sarasota, Osceola and St. Johns. 

Even Eckerd 's home county of Pinellas 
gave Graham a respectable vote, but his 
biggest margins — two-to-one or more — 
came in Dade, Hillsborough, Leon and 
Orange. 



In winning. Graham put to rest the jinx 
that had repeatedly denied the prize to 
other Miamians. Until Graham, no Florida 
governor had come from farther south than 
Fort Pierce and Graham's father, the late 
Sen. Ernest Graham, vyas among the many 
who didn't make it. 

Graham, who will be 42 years old 
tomorrow, will succeed pop^lar Gov. 
Reubin Askew on Jan. 2. 



Revisions, casinos bite the dust 



MUMI (UPI) — Voters rejected a 
proposal to make Florida the nation's third 
state with legalized casino gambling 
yesterday, turning down by niore than 2-1 a 
plan to put casinos along a 16-niile strip of 
south Florida's '^Gold Coast.** 

Floridians >lso rejected all eight 
Constitution Revision Commission propo- 
sals, standing firm for the Cabinet and 
against an appointed Public Service 
Commission and state educaticm boardT 

The casino victory capped the political 
career of Gov. Reubin Askew, who 
appeared before jubilant supporters Hi the 
headquarters of two anti-casino groups that 
worked with him to shoot down Proposition 
9. The amendment called for legaHied 
gaming houses akmg the ocean from Miami 



Beach north to mid-iioi^rwood. 

"I don't know it*s right to judge I'm 
lespcmsibie iw the A^feat of gambling. I 
was just in the right place at tiie right time 
and I felt strongly about it," Askew said. 

With 42 percent of the state's 3,579 
precincts reporting, the vote tally was 
616,833 against ca^aos to 256,119 in favor 
of the amendment. 

In additbn to casino gambling, voters 
rejected some 100 chaises to the 1968 
Constitution put together over the last six 
months by the Constttntion Revision 
Commission. 

''Revision opponents will say the peo|^ 
won. 1 don't agree with that. The people 
didn't win. but the people will be back ' 
said Steve lAlieldcr. ndw nerved as CRC 



executive director. 

Defeated 3-1 was revision 1, the massive 
catch-all containing the bulk of CRC work 
and provisions limiting Cabinet members to 
two consecutive terms, establishing a state 
right to privacy, and letting grand jury 
witnesses be accompanied by their 
attorney. 

Also defeated were proposals making 
county and circuit judges appointed instead 
of elected, establishing a ''little Equal 
Rights Amendment." ordering single- 
member legislative districts, providing tax 
breaks to big business, and creating an 
appointed education board and giving the 
Board of Regents constitutional status, 
which turned out to be one of the most 
oontraveiaial CRC r ec omm endations. 



Jefferev La 




Commis^onter of Ed 



Baifi^h Juriir^gton 



Casino GambMng 



for 




72%i 



BnvJr DfK'Ument 




40% 

60% 



iM&hl Lii i \ V &€44»ii'ibu(im ' 




76% 




— ^ 



^^^^^ 



piiiii i iii V ' 





/Against 



34% 



PetB Bratfmaite 



81% 



School Board 





55% 
45% 



Jiidge Mliilt 



For retmtmn 

ration 




31 

J] 



m 1 



•ii' 




». 



r 




if 



ii 



I 



Incumbents take local races; annexation vote fail 



by d#nnis mulqueen 

The predicUbiiity of the genenl electioB 
eiteaded to the local level yesterday, as 
Don Fuqua scored aa e xp ecte d laadsilde 
victory over Pele Brathwaite to returo his 
district 2 Congressional seat, and 
Repoblican fncvntbeat Fete Everett 
narrowly defeated John Crotty to ^ win 
another term on the Leon County Schocd 
Board. 

In other local issues, voters retained 
Woodrow Melvin as district court of appeal 
judge, and decided not to annex a square 

mile around Godby High School. 

City precincts unanimously approved Hie 
annexation issue, but the only county 
precinct polled, that of the annexation 
parcel itself, killed the measure by voting 
against it 173 votes to 150. 

Speaking from the viaor's circle, Fuqua 



praised the results as a **vote of 
and piQMised to **atrive lo 
the coafideaoe which the people 
I me by striving eves harder to 
ne a gooo ano enecnve represeiuacive. 

Fuqua oonunended tepobfictt 
ger Pete Brathwaite fot having ran a deoi 
and po si ti v e campaign. 

**This is the type of campaign which can 
secve as an example for good, clean 
elections which addrt ss the issues and not 
personalities," Fuqua ^aid. 

As of 11:20 p.m., Fuqua captured 81 
percent of the vote, or 74, 1 15, as opposed to 
Brathwaite s 19 percent, or 17,822 votes. 

In the district five school board race, the 
issues were money versus management. 
Republican incumbent Pete Everett, 
campaigning on the theme that the school 
board's problems are due to a lack of 
money, defeated Democrat John Crotty by a 



3,50IKvole 

Crotty maintateed that the school 
system's pfoMema were dtte to a tocfc of 
planning. 

••We were rasning against three 
opponents/' said Everett, an eight-year 
veteran of the school bo«d. 'Tm an 
mcvmbent, Vm a BepnhKean, aad I ran 
against John Ckotty." 

Democrat Ootty. who came np 10 
percent short, said he* was pnwd of hb 
effort. 

"Cdnsidering where we started from, I 
think we did mighty weU." he sa^ adding 
that the rain probably hurt his chances. 

Leon County Supervaor of Electioas 
Wilma Sullivan said she didn't thmfc the 
rain was a factor. 

•The rain stopped an hoar before the 
polls closed." Sullivan said, "and I thmfc 
everybody who was going to vote did." 




Don Fuqua 



Feminist groups claim votes to pass ERA 



MIAMI (UPl) — Equal Rights Amendment supporters 
Pat Frank and George Stuart Jr. won crucial Senate seats 
yesterday and feminist groups said they now have the votes 
for Senate ratification of the ERA. 

Barring upsets of pro-ERA candidates by opponents 
considered token, amendment supporters now have the 
21 -vote majority needed for ratification, says Florida NOW 
lobbyist Tma Slaney in Tallahassee. 

"We need a seat for insnrancr, but right now, we have 
it," Slaney said. 

Frank D-Tampa, a one-term House member, beat David 
Ray, R-Plant City, for the remaining two years of the term 
vacated when Betty Castor became running mate in Lt. Gov. 
Jim Williams' unsuccessful gubernatorial campaign. 

Stuart, D-Orlando, who resigned his City Council post to 
mn for the seat vacated when Senate Republican Leader 
Ken Plante decided not to seeiL re-electioii, beat J<^mny 
J^femer, R- Winter Park. 

Pro-ERA candidates in two odier crucial races trailed. 



Rep. Van Poole, R-Fort Lauderdale, held a steady lead over 
Marcia Beach, D-Fort Lauderdale. Veteran Sen. John Ware, 
R-St. Petersborg, led Beverly Roberts, D-St. Petersburg 

Frank's victory is crucial, Slaney said, because national 
ERA organizations, including Stop ERA, threw sobstai^l 
support behind Ray. 

'•Ray's race was their big target in Florida and they lost 
it," she said. 

The amendment has failed in the Senate repeatedly, 
although gotten through the House where supporters are 
confident they still have a wide majority vote. It failed 21-19 
in the Senate in 1977, the last time a vote was taken. 

In other noteworthy races, two long-time House powers. 
Rules Chairperson A.H. **Gus" Craig. D-St. Augustine, and 
Appropriations Chairperson Ed Fortune, tried to move into 
the Senate, knowing their influence would be diminished 
under Speaker Hyatt Brown's "^ -^ .t., .-^*' administration. 



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Zither concert today at FSU 



Pitrfessor Tsai-Pbig liing from Taiwan will peffiorm 
traditloiial and conlempafafy Chineae melodies oo the 
Cheng, a Chinese 12-stitog lidier, today $k 3:30 p.m. in 
Opperman Musk Hail at FSU. 

His free concert wffl featofe works based on the 
landscapes, creatBies, and ideolo^es of mainland Cluna 
and Taiwan. 

Liang, whom music professors descrflie as one of the 
greatest living Chinese musicians, has made concerts and 
lecture tours timmglioiit Eoiope, Asia and North America 
He has performed at Carnegie Hall, tiie Caltaral Center of 
the Philippines, and the NatiMial Theater of Korea in 
Seoul. 

Liang is a past president of the Chinese Classical Music 
Association and Author (tf the book Mnale af Hw Qmg, 

now in its eighth edition. 



Mib- 



seniOR BSn nuRSES 



You may be eligible for an exciting 
arxi rewarding nursing career in the USAF 
upon graduation. 

The Air Force now offers a five 

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For more details on this and other 
Air Force nursing opportunities contact: 



CAPTAIN WARREN WARD 
4640 Oranp Blossom Trail - Room 901B 

Oriando, Florida 32809 
CALL COLLECT: 305/855-2830 

AIR rORCC 

A Cfeol Vkiy of Life 



i 




i 



by caryi 

A week oi 
by the four 
ccMoing Coui 
will end t< 
students go t< 
Mke their fi! 
student govcn 




I ynn Ha 




Robin R 



COIIECTI' 
firam ycsterda; 
someone pro 
study graduat 
are two separ 

MARTHA 
with Ira Shorr 
tonight at 10. 

THE FSU 
schedule over 
a.m. - 10 p.m. 
and 2 p.m. to 

THE MO 
Marks Wildlif. 
and rides will 
Rqom 234 Con 

THE WO 
this issue. The 
or to submit 
644^7. 

DR. RICH 
excavaticms it^i 
Bellamy. 

EVENING 
Cardio-pulmonj 
Smoking will b 
fortheevenin 
For more infc 
to 10 p.m. M 



We a 



Skies will b< 
showers and . t| 
disperse ttH.i 
of shovMTs. 1 h( 
with highs mo! 
today is 40 pert 
from the north 




FSU 

will perform 
on the 
1 3:30 p.m. in 

ised on the 
[inland Oiina 

IS one of the 
concerts and 

»rth America. 

iral Center of 
of K(M«a in 

issical Music 
ff iht Cheng. 



1^ 



4^ 



SES 



fxclting 
|e USAF 

a five 

ill quaii- 

id other 
on tact: 



m901B 

2830 



FLQRIDA FLAMBEAU Wednesday, November 8 1978 3 




FSU run-offs today 



by emryn carfton electkms 



A w€€k of cwnpt^niBg 
hy the torn FSU Hom- 
coming Court caadidirtes 
will en4 today when 
students go to peOs to 
make tbek final dKMoes is 
student! 




L ynn Hamrick 




Robin Ryan 



The Homeooming taOies 
and the oltlniate winners 
will not be annoasced ootil 
the annoal Seminc^ Pow 
Wow, hdd Nov. 17 at 
Cao^^ll Stadlnm. . 

Contending Homecom- 
faig candidates are Sot^ 
Ryan and Lynn Hamrick for 
Princess, and Dave Glicken 
and Ed Strickland for Chief. 

In addition , students 
will vote in the runoff 
elections of three student 
senate seats. Arts and 
Sciences Seat one will be 
decided between Allen 
Fonseca (United Seminoles) 
and Ed Strickland (Action), 
while Arts and Sciences 
seat two is a toss up 
between Sylvia Clayton 
(United Seminoles) and 
Esther Reichland (Action). 
BUly Byrd (United Sem- 
inoles) and Patty Jackson 
(Action) are in the run-offs 
for Social Science Seat one. 

The results of the 
elections, which will be 
tallied by computer in the 
School of Business, should 
be available by early this 
evening. 

Ballot boxes will be 
located at Moore AudstcMr- 
ium, Bellamy Building, the 



In Brief 



COUSCtiM: The inadvertent omission of a comma 
from yesterday's story on SG grants made it seem that 
someone proposed inviting UN ambassiulors to FSU to 
study graduates' success in finding jobs. Actually, these 
are two separate pn^iosals. 

MAITHA CUME will discuss metephysical healing 
with Ira Shorr on WFSU's ^'Speakeasy" radio talk show 
tonight at 10. Listeners are invited to call in. 

THE FSU UBRARY wiU opente on tiie f^lowmg 
schedule over the Veterans Day weekend: Thursday, 8 
a.m. - 10 p.m.; Closed Friday; 8 a.m.-6 p.m* on Saturday, 
and 2 p.m. to mi<!hiigfat on Sunday. 

THE IH0L06Y dXlB is spcmsoring a field trip to St. 
Marks Wildlife Refuge Friday. Transportation is provided, 
and ri^ wffl start at 5:30 a.m. Sign up list is avaOabte in 
R(«om 234 Cooradi. 

THE WOMEN'S CENTER newsletter is seeking writers 
this issue. The deadline is Nov. 20. For more information 
or to submit a news item, write box U-6826 or call 
644-4007. 

DR. RICHARD COOKE wiU speak on his recent 
excavations in Panama today at 3:30 p.m. in Room 35 
Bellamy. 

EVENING CLASSES in Childbirth Education, 
Cardio-pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and Stopping 
Smoking will begin next week at Godby High Schod. Costs 
for the evening courses range ftom $2.50 to $5 per person. 
For more information, call Godby at 488-1325 from. 2 p.m. 
to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday. 



Weather 



Skies will be mostly cloudly today with a chance of 
showers and a few thundershowers. The clouds will mostly 
disperse tonight and tomorrow, with only a slight chance 
of showers. The lows tonight will be in the low to mid 50s. 
with highs mostly in the mid 70s. The probability of rain 
today is 40 percent today, dropping tonight. Winds will be 
from the north at 10 to 15 m.p.h. 



Fine Arts Building the Law 

School. Williams Building. 
Education Building, the 
Post-Office Arcade, the 
Music Arcade. Keen Plaza, 
and Strozier Library. 

In case of rain, all polling 
places will be moved 
inside, and the Library 
ballot box will be relocated 
to Montgomery Gym. 

Polls will remain open 
from 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m., 
and students will be 
required to show a 
validated FSU student 
identification card in order 
to vote. 

In addition to run-off 
choices, the ballot will 
contain two opinion ques- 
tions: whether students 
would be willing to pay $5 
for a yearbook if one were 
published, and if students 
would object to $1 price 
hike in Health Care fees if 
dental care were provided 
as a part of the Health 
center Services. 




Dave Glicken 




Ed Strickland 





Mofi. — 



Wed. 



BOZO 
NIGHT 

$3 nr>en and ladies 
ALL YOU CAN DRINK 

LADIES' 
NIGHT 

3 FREE DRINKS 



Thure. — 



MEN'S 
NIGHT 

50 csnt Htohbglit 
for mon 

675 W. Jefferson 

from South QaUm of FSU 



^2 



;■•->;■■ 



u< 

m 

Mules laden with Blue Maguey jrinas on their way to Cuervo's La Rajena plant. 



Since 1795 weVe withered our 
Blue Maguey s for Cuervo G old 
the gentS way 

Its the old way And still 
the best 



At Cuervo Tve know that there is only one way to make 

Cuervo Gold perfect. The way we Ve been doing it for more 
than 180 years. 

That 's why people stiU nurture our fields of Blue 
Maguey plants. Ana why mules are still used to bring 
these precious plants to our dit^tillery. Fbr tradition is still 
the most important ingredient in Cuervo Gold. 

This is what maJces Cuervo Gold truly special. Neat, 
on the rocks, nrith a splash of soda, in a perfect Sunrise or 
Margarita, Cuenx> Gold uriU bring you back to a time when 
qiudity ruled the world. 

Cuervo. The Gold standaixl since 1795. 

CUERVO ESPECIAL* TEQUILA. 80 PROOF. IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY ® 1978 HEUBLElN. INC. HARTFORD. CONN. 




^11 



7i» ; 



lit \ 



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SG 



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4 I 



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11 




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I! 



tip 




Tests on Yom Kippur are unconstitutional 



Editor: 

The situation which compels me to write this lett^ deals 
with one of the most basic and fiindameirtai rights that the 
United States Constitutioo guarantees to each and every 
person in tliis country and one which distinguishes our form 
of government from those of tlie Soviet Union, Nazi 
Germany or any other country that practices or has practiced 
a policy of repiesMon. That right is embodied in the First 
Ammendment to our Constitution and guarantees aU of as 
the right to freely exercise our religious beliefs no matter 
what they are, wHIiQOt iateifemice from any governmental 
source. 

Unfortunately, there are some professors in this 
university, who, by their actions, rrfuse to adhere to this 
most basic tenet of our form of government. I am referring 
to the handful ai professors In varioiis departments of this 
university who would give an exam on Yom Kippur, the 
holiest day of the Jewish year, and who would insidiou^ 
penalize anyone who refused to take the exam, by utilizing 
means inch as subjective gmding or other leverage whidi 
would cause these students to be unfairiy discriminated 
against if they instead decided to aieicise th^ First 
Amendment r^hts. 

That these professors obvioiisly have no regafd nor 
respect for the Jewish religion seems clear. What is more 
frightening though, is that they hold the power of the grade 
over these students to the point where had they dedded to 
speak out against this discriminatory and anti-semitk 
behavior to a department head or to Dr. Sliger, they would 
fear retaliation by the professor in ways which would be 
virtually impossible to prove. Unfortunately, it was this very 
grade leverage that firi^itened these students into keeping 
silent, thus fofdng them to do something that was in durect 
cotttraiMcticm to their religious beliefs. 

This cfafflui^ difect on their fight to freely exercise this 
basic First Amendmeiit right cannot and should sot be 
condoned. 



No, I am not in one of those classes in which a professor 
felt the need to give an exam on Yom Kippur and thus force 
upon these students the choice of being penalized for freely 
exercising their religious convictions. I am just a concerned 
Jewish student, enrolkd in the School of Law, who feels that 
this type of discriminatory and illegal conduct should be put 
to an end in a state institution of higher learning such as 
FSU, and anywhere else where freedom and justice prevail. 

Although these professors ndgfiit not agree that the most 



sacred of Jewish Holy days is important enough for them to 
reschedule a test for the few Jewish students who wish to 
observe it, the heads of their department and Dr. Slige- 
himself should take appropriate action to sec that incidents 
such as have occured during these past Jewish High HoK 
days do not occur again as long as the First Araendaieit 
remains a part of our free society. 



J. 



IMAGINE! 




Communist youth says shah 'no more than 



Editor: 

In recent months we have heard almost daily accounts of 
mass rebellions against the shah of Iran and his fascist 
regime. Just recently at least 50 more people were gunned 
down in the streets by the shah's troops, who, under martial 
law , have orders to shoot to kill. Last month millions took to 
the streets in the most massive demonstrations against the 
shah's regime in his 25 years of bloody rule. On Sept. 8, now 
called "Black Friday," as many as 10,000 unarmed people 
were killed in the streets in different cities throughout Iran. 

But the most vicious crime committed by this dictator who 
is no more than a rabid dog, occured on Saturday, Aug. 19, 25 
years to the day after the CIA-engineered coup that placed 
the shah back on his blood soaked throne in 1953. That night 
the shah's police and army burned to death nearly 800 people 
who were w atching a progressive film in the Rex Theater of 
Abadan. In a closely coordinated media campaign, official 
Iranian sources and the U.S. press immediately blamed 
"Moslem fanatics" and "Islamic Marxists" for setting the 
fire. This slander was an attempt to discredit the peoples' 
movement internationally. By attacking the opposition and 
creating the impression outside Iran that everyone in the 
movement, or the majority of its leaders are fanatics and 
terrorists, the shah aims to justify continued oppression and 
possible direct U.S. military involvement to stamp out the 
movement for independence and democracy. 

But who are the real terrorists? Anyone who would gun 
down thousands of unarmed people in the streets. I would call 
a terrorist! Anyone who would burn to death a theater full of 
young people, I would call a terrorist! And any system which 
has sold $18 billion worth of arms to the shah of Iran. I w ould 
call that a terrorist system. And that's just what our ruling 
class has done and is doing, and that' s what imperialism is all 



about: using whatever means necessary to maintain its 
system of exploitation and misery. 

And what about President Jimmy "Human Rights'* 
Carter, who phoned the shah at the height of the slaughter 
last month and gave him his full support and best wishes that 
the violence would soon be over so they could get back to the 
business of making profit? How the hell can you call the 
majority of the Iranian people — nearly 34 million of them — 
terrorists? This is absurd. 

What is more absurd is all the garbage we're supposed to 
believe about the shah's so-called liberal reforms and 
modernization. These amount to pushing more of the 
peasantry off their land and building new modern Chase 
Manhattan Banks to replace the old ones being burned down 
by the people in their righteous protests against these 



Flambeau 



symbols of U.S. imperalism. 



Jeff KooBfy 



Florida Flambeau Inc. Business and Advertising offk:e 206 N. Woodward 
Avenue, phone 644-4075; Newsroom 204 N. Woodward Avenue, phone 
644-5505; Production/Mediatype lab 314 University Union, phone 
644-5744; Classified ad off ice 306 University Union, phone 644-5785. 

Mattng addrass, P.O. Box U-7001, Florids StMi Uni¥«rsity, TaRahassee, 

^« - ' J- ■ 
I nriGHL 



Steve Watkms Bitter 

Beth Riidowsfce NewsE&tar 

Sidney Bedingfidd S^)ort8 Editor 

DamdVost Aasistaiit News Editor 

Ken Lewandoski Arts / Features Editor 



A grasp on Bergman 

Editor: 

There's something new and exciting on this campus, and 
the students should be made aware of it. Your newspaper 
took a great first step by announcing in an article that a film 
minor, under the directorship of Dr. Pteter Stowell, is no» 
available. 

I am a senior with a major in English and a minor in 
history. Although I am too far along to change minors, I at 
least hope that other students wiU consider a film minor 
one of my first courses at FSU was Uie study of film. 
Dr. Stowell teaching it. I found him to be an excellent 
lecturer, intelli^nt, and possessing a wide range of 
knowledge. For example, he also teaches modem European 
literature. His book coiicendng Janes and Chekhov was 
accepted last year, and wiU soon be published and released 

One point I caimot stress enough is that If you enjoy nin 

yet worry that studying then wifl ruin the enjoyment 
them, then don't despair. Dr. Stowell. I believe. wouJ 
agtee with Janes Agee. a 1950*s film critic, scriptwriter, 
and noveilsl. who once wtc that films are often "a nvx 
warm bath of sentimental enjoyment." But Agee saw. ^ 
does Dr. Stowefl. that film is a true art §ona. The study of » 
wiM oBly enhance yom ^ioyneat. Students, take a chance 
Bergman, FM, FelM, TnObmU Kubrick, and Ata**^ 
within your gra^. 



# 



TiM new siii 
rtpfficnttng th\ 
involves lawsu 

The admin 15 
ol a Student Ai 
are now being 

An SG con] 
adninistration 
ef Hie attofiie> 

"fai addition 

wm tlie univt 
proliibited res 
univefftity. ' 
"We struck th.n 
have been inte^ 
According ti) 
by Dr. Bob Lea 
the attorney ^ 

Grani 



Results of an 
involving an 
County Grand 
spokesperson V' 

The investig. 
Springer shot n 
Saulsberry in h'\ 
but Smith said 
press. 

"h's a rout 



State, 
Nationi 



0 
PRL 

Local 

Comim 

FSU/i 



1. Voi 

2. 881 

3. Roi 

4. Ob, 

5. Tea\ 

6. Tui 

TEAM 

1. Each m» 
graduate stu^ 
befofe April 

2. A (Mm 

woman 

3 EacH rf^^r 

NAT! 




FLORIDA FLAMBEAU ^*/oh.-oc^ . ^ 



al 



[ugh for them to 
Vts who wish to 
[and 0r. Sliger 
^ that incidents 
mh High Holy 



I J* Sneider 




Youth Brigade 



man 



[s campus, and 
>ur newspaper 
bde that a fihB 
;toweU, is now 

id a minor 
le nmiors, I 
a fUm minor, 
of film, with 
an excellent 
ide range of 
lern Europe 
OMliov was 
and released. 

^ou enjoy filiJ^ " 
enjoyment * 

relieve, woo-J 
scriptwriter, 

often "a nice 
Agec saw. ^ 
The study ci it 
Itake a chance: 
id Altman««* 



SG attorney can't sue university 



I' r 



by Howard libin 

NambMu staff writer 

The new student body attorney will be responsible for 
representing the interest of all FSU students, but not if it 
involves lawsuits against the university. 

I he administration and SG have agreed on the concept 
of a Student Attorney's Office since July, and proposals 
are now being made as to the role and scope of the office. 

An SG committee met yesterday to discuss an 
administration proposal which outlined the characteristics 
of the attorney's job. 

"In addition to the limitations on the attorney's ability to 
sue the university, was a clause which would have 
prohibited research which may be damaging to the 
university." said Neal Friedman, student body president. 

We struck that section from the draft, because it could 
have been interpreted too many ways.'* 

According to a memorandum of understanding written 
by Dr. Bob Leach, FSU vice president of student affairs, 
the attorney would be required to perform a variety of 



legal work and research aimed at enforcing, interpreting 
and applying the regulations of FSU and state law. In 
addition, he would be reqionsible for the ooofdiiiatioii of 
the student legal assistance program. 

A ban would be placed on the attorney to keep him or 
her from offering direct legal service to any student or 
employee of the university, unkss it was a tile i^eiest of 
a large number of studeata. 

The attorney woold head op tlie new SG Office of 
Student Advocacy, with a total budget of over $36,000 
annually. The fnnds would go toward the attorney and a 
seeretary, plus funds to cover office expenses. 

The committee which will select the new attorney 
consists of seven students and faculty members, including 

Leach and Friedman. 

"We want to start the selection process soon so we can 
get the program off to a good start in January,*' Friedman 
said. "If we have an attorney now, we wiNild be 
investigating the civic center scandal." 



Grand jury gets Springer case Nov. 14 



by danni vogt 

assistant news editor 

Results of an investigation into the shooting last month 
involving an FSU police officer will go before the Leon 
County Grand Jury Nov. 14. SherifFs Department 
spokesperson Wayne Smith said yesterday. 

The investigation of the incident, in which Sgt. Troy 
Springer shot and killed Tallahassee postal worker Willie 
Saulsberry in Frisch*s parking lot, has been completed, 
but Smith said no information could be released to the 
press. 

'it's a routine procedure, although a secret one. 



whenever a public official is involved (in a case like this)," 
Smith said of his inability to release information pending 
the grand jury sesion. 

Springer, a nine-year veteran of the FSU police force, 
killed Saulsberry at 11:45 a.m. Oct. 25 shortly alter 
stopping him for a routine traffic violation, police said. 

According to w itnesses, a gun fell from Saulsberry's lap 
when he was pulled dead from his car. None of the 
witnesses were certain if Saulsberry, who knew Springer 
prior to the incident, had pulled a gun on Springer before 

the shooting. 



Hit CO S 

Rear Wifiq of th<? 
Qualitv inn Southern Aire 

221-71 Id 




Warehouse 

aircuttersi 




State, Regional and 
National Competition 

PLUS 

OTHER 
PRIZES!!! 

Local Competition 

Coming Date: Nov. 10-12 

FSU INTRAMUIRAL FIELDS 

1. Voiley Bail 

2. 880 Reiay 
2. Round-of-Bud 

4. Obstacle Course 

5. Team Frisbee 

6. Tug-of'War , 

TEAM QUALIFICATIONS 

1. Each member must be an ac** ful-tima undacgraduate or 
graduate student in Florida Stale tMMditv. Students graduatmg 

before April 1 are not eligible. 

2. A team must consist of ejght individuals, four men and four 



Budweiser %^(^, 




Rules Meeting TODAY (NOV. 8) 

- one representative from each team 214 Tully 
5:00 p.m. Nov. 8 5:00 p.m. 

Last Chance to Register 



It's coming to 
YOUR CAMPUS 





Budweiser 



women 

3. Each member must sign a KabHity 





NA TIONALS TO BE HB.D AT DA YTONA BEACH "SPRING BREAK' 



9^ 



HI 



i 
- i 



: f 



6 ' Wednesday, November 8. 1978 FLORIDA FIAMB^EAU 





ft'-' 



I 



if i- 



III 



. 101^ 
III. 



If 







-if I 



i 



Democrats victorious 
in three Cabinet races 



MIAMI — Democrats swept to vidory in 
all three contested Cabinet races 
yesterday, assuring cootiniied Democratic 
control of the p o we r fu l state govemnig 
body for aiMier four years. 

Sen. George Firestone of Miami 
defeated lepoblican Rep. Ander Crmsliaw 
of Jacksonville in Hie secretary of state 
race, and incombent Tieamrer-lnsnranre 
Commisaioner Bffl Gonter and i n c umb e n t 
Edocatlon Commissioner Ra^ Turlington 
easyy turned back tbeir GOP opponoits. 

Wttb 45' percent of the vote counted, 
Firestone ha4 52 percent of the vote to end 
Crenshaw's bid to become the first 
Republican elected to the C^ilnet since 
Recfmstruction days. 

Gunter swunped Jeffrey Latham of 
Davie, who was making his third bid for the 
office, taking 76 percent of the vote with 46 
percent of the precincts in, and Turlington 
turned back tiie GOP challenge of little- 
known Herman IHHiams, a redred college 
professor from Gainesville, taking 65 
percent, also with 46 percent the vote m. 

*i never really thought about losing the 
campaign," Firestone said. "(Baseball 
pitcher) Satdiel Paige once said, * Just keep 



looking forward/ and that's what I've 



Gunter said he was delighted at the 
margin of his victory. 

*'I think ft is an imfication by the public 
that they have an insurance commissioner 
who's wilHng to stand up to insurance 
companies," Gunter said. 

**I figured my rock bottom vote was 60 
percent." Turlington said. , '*rm well 
pleased with 65 percent." 

Democrats were unopposed for the other 
tiiree Cabinet seats on the ballot. 

Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Conner 
was uncqiposed in e^ier party in his bid for 
a sixth term; Tallahassee attorney Jim 
Smith was assured the attorney general's 
seat when he defeated Rep. Alan Becker of 
North Miami Beach in the Democratic 
party's primary runoff; and incumbent 
Comptroller Gctald Lewis won re-election 
when he defeated Rep. Don Hazelton in the 
Urst primary. 

Firestone, 47, who served six years in 
the House and six years in the Senate, 
defeated four odier Democrats to win his 
party's nomination for the seat vacated by 
Bruce Smathers. who ran unsuccessfully 
for governor. 



Doyle Conner 




Bill Gunter 




Ralph Turlington 




MARIANNA 
aVKN 

HUP 

Sot. Nov. 11 
Sign ap ■ 

Rm. 238 UiMM 
or caH 4-6710 



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serving over 30 years 



IFoQ^iiM^fli^^ I^iff ^M^6fl^ Foods 
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STUDENT SPECIAL 

ALL YOU CAN EAT SALAD BAR 
$1.40 with p«dMM of mMA 

soup, pizza, or oneleto 



Veol Pormeson 

• Mexican Plottefff 

YoIm Rke DUei 

AuttMiitlc Cuban SandwtohM 
wid BlMk Bmm SoMp 

Phone 222-2337 
East Tennassae St. 

"At the corner of Gadsden and TannaMoe St. 




629 W. 

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\OPEN AT 7:00 A.M. DAIl^ 
SPECIALS: Wed. iVot?. 8 
^rii Sat. Nov. II 

Sow Dougk Bread . 65'/l»«* 

Pumpkin Pie Sqi 
Assorted Cooides 

(exeept Cli«c. Chip) 

2*«flmo» MoaMbte from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. (at Tenn. location) Sf»o* 
"•o good at our Timberiane location 



Tanz 



PAIESSALAAW. 
half H* -^^^ 

with iJg-'^*** yestcrd. 

tinder heavy ili«w»ij 
Rwaocia. 

iadio VpmSB »ald 
Ip^ moved into RwiH 

gUtf.; and hombir^ 






dat 

ve s 



rpttan PrcMtlcn 
rdav he will n 
Israel unless 
'i.ifions with th' 
future * ' 'Hvupi. 

Sadat. aKiiiK T 
Cairo after a four-h 

*said the West B 
no later than 
Egyptian Israeli pea 

Sa<id's remarks t 
an 11 quivocal war 
treaty he 
►hington must ) 
Ik and the tutu 

there. 
Israeli Defense Mi 
turned to Washin 



9a.m| 

Rm.314 



Admission 



on 

11 HOME 
$12 Stl 



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FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



Tanzania mobilizes army, attacks Uganda 



DAS ES SALAAM, Taazania — Tanzaaii 
oved half its traiy lo the battlefroat 
ith Ugaflda yesteiday and the Ugandans 
arged that thcir posltkms wem oonA^ 
ider heavy AfS&ng from iielsitxiring 
^aiida. 

Radio Uganda sakt tiiat Tanzanian lioopt 
! had moved into Rwanda and "gave begun 
shelling and honfMs^ U^Hnda Iran the 
Rwanda border/* 



if true, it would ouurk a ^vmatic 
eifMnsioa of the East African war, Ringing 
tiny Rwttida Into the conflict for the first 
time and perhaiw heraldii^ the start of a 
TanzMlaa mvasion of Uganda. 

Ugandan President kH Amin has warned 
the United States not to intervene in his 
armed eotifllct widi Tanzania. 

Amin said m a note to the U.N. that 
Secretary of State Cyras Vnce had 
threatened to do so. 



Sadat demands Palestinians 
have say in peace treaty 



Fgvptian President Anwar Sadat said 
vLsterday he will not sign a peace treaty 
uith Israel unless it clearly refers to 
negotiations with the Palestinians over the 
tut lire of the occupied West Bank. 

Sadat, speaking to foreign reporters in 
Cairo after a four-hour cabinet meeting, 
also said the West Bank negotiations must 
start no later than one month after an 
hgvptian-Israeli peace treaty is signed. 

Sadat's remarks appeared to constitute 
an unequivocal warning to Israel that the 
peace treaty being negotiated in 
Washington must be linked to the West 
Bank and the future of the Palestinians 
living there. 

Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman 
returned to Washington yesterday after 



briefing the Israeli cabinet on the 
negotiations which, despite the West Bank 
dispute, have made what a high Egyptian 
official characterized as unprecedented 
progress. 

A statement read jrfterwards said **the 
linkage between the settlement on the 
Egyptian ftont and the sotutkm of the other 
aspects of the problem is an inevitable 
matter.** 

Speaking to reporters, Sadat added that 
"Egypt will not sign a peace treaty with 
Israel unless it refers clearly to future 
upcoming negotiations with representa- 
tives of the Palestinian people so that they 
decide on their future in the. West Bank 
and Gaza.** 




d mediatype 

_JJ 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 
[[Rm. 314 University Union 



typesetting, layout b 
paste-' in services 



Iz 



644-5744 



3 



The conflict between Tanzania and 
Uganda, Amin said, "is entirely an African 
ptobleni.*' 

Bat the Carter administration, he 
charged, "wishes to take advantage of it to 
have another Vietnam in the heart of 
Africa.** 

In the note, addressed to U.N. Secretary 
General Kort Wal^ieim, Amin said Vance, 
"during a press interview,** had "issued a 
warning to Uganda that unless Ugandan 
troops withdraw from Tanzania the United 
States wiO intervene.*' 

Uganda Radio sakl that 10,000 Tanzanian 
troops were massed along the battlefield, 
poised to strike into Uganda through the 
Merama hills on the triangular Rwanda- 
Tanzania-Uganda border. 

Military observers said Tanzania had two 



to try to regain the territory 
captured by Uganda laif wtdk — to Im^de 
through Rwanda or to mumt tioopa across 
Lake Victoria nofthwards m an attompt to 
surround the Ugandans. 

if the Radio Uganda report proves true, it 
would mean th^ Tanzanians have 
apparently opted for the first ahemative. 

Tanzania earlier yesterday moved more 
than half of its 14.000 man army to tlie 
battle fron with Uganda and charged timt 19 
Tanzanian students in Uganda had been 
murdered since the outbreak of hostilities. 

Responding to Tanzanian statements tfiat 
it intended to try to oust Amin and get **rid 
of tiUn snake InMn our 
Radio said its army was capable of 
rqNilstng any attack and die strflcing deep 
into Tanzania itself. 



S()er)(j cjn evening with 

me, at 

Kit to 'S _ 



Piano Bar 



LINDA 



LPO 



fUl nut StMB] 



-TOIMIGHTl- 
Tast 



h» a M5 Mi. 

Moore Aud. $1 .00 



^i.^arlt RESTAURANT 

^ ST. MARKS, FLOHD A 

Straight Out WoodvIHe Highway 
18 miles South 
FAMOUS FOR THE FRESHEST SEAFOOD I 
INFLORDIA 

MULLET NIGHT 
(MoDday & Wednesday) 

AU the Fresh MoUet Yon Can Eal 
with Hush Puppies, Cam Pirfl 
FiunchFiiea tl.Rt 

HOUSE SPECLiLTlES 

Steak &Kfa«CWb 7.50 

^ Kfaig Crab 8.50 

— ^ Stuffed 8,2$ 

CXNMBSBB ^^^^ 

ST. MARKS 




Open Hi 
10a.B.— 10:30p.Hi. 
Dafly 



— 10s30p.«. 




'IRff 

m 








SC^IQE 




premier Rock and Roi 

Tonight at 

TOMMY'S 

480W.Tenn. St. 
Admission only a buck and 25 cent draft tiN 1 1 p.m. 



BASKETBALL 
TICKETS 

on sale at Tully Gym 

fl 1 HOME GAME SEASON TICKE" 
$ 1 2 Students $ 1 5 Guest 

(limit one) 

Limited number of 
season tickets available 



STUDENT DRYCLEANING SPECIALS 



1413 W. Tennessee 
West end of FSU 
Campus 224-8620 

SLACKS only 

SWEATERS 89^ 
SKIRTS 



2526 S. Monroe 
Southside Shopping 
Center Near FAMU 
877^376 



1818 N. Monroe 
385-6418 

SUITS OR 
DRESSES 

only 

$1.69 

Aoch 



VALIDATED ID REQUIRED 
FOR PURCHASE 



Top Quality and Service on Dry Cleaning and Laundry 

8 to 5 Sat. 



■1* 



8 / Wednesday, Novembef 8, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



M 





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1 

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Arts /Features 



For some people, life 
really is a high-wire act 



by caryn carison 

fl«mbcau writer 

When Mark Reina and Larr\' Kay go for 
a walk, chances are it's not your ordinary 
afternoon stroll. 

Reina and Kay. both one-year veterans 
of the FSU Flying High Circus, have been 
partners in a high wire act for about six 
months. 

Though both performers are quite 
flexible — each participates in several 
different circus acts — most of their 
present practice time is spent on high w ire. 

Reina and Kay's original act. which has 
since been added to significantly, consisted 
of fairly routine high wire tricks. 

When they began a year ago, Kay would 
ride a bicycle across the wire with Terri 
Murphy, their original third partner, 
sitting on his shoulders. Next, Reina would 
sit in a diair balanced on the wire, and 
lastly they would form a three-man 
pyramid using a yoke, a contraptioii which 
crasists two harnesses connected by a 
pole. The harness would rest on Reina and 
Kay's sfaoolders, and Murphy would stand 
oo tiie poUe while they crossed the wire. 

Their first performance was somewhat 
less than a success. 

"It was terrible," laughs Kay. "It was 
inconsistent. It took too long. An average 
act last eight minutes; that one took 18." 

Shortly after that first fiasco, Murphy 
quit, and the partners decided to perfect a 
two-man act. 

One month of one- to two-hour daily 
pfa^u^c^ iaier, Reina and Kay had 
progressed far enough to work the act 
during their summer jobs at Callaway 
Gardens, a Georgia resort where the FSU 
circus members annually perform and 
serve as recreations counselors. 

Though the two-man act went well at 
Callaway Gardens, the partners recently 
decided that the routine would be 
broadened by the addition of a third 
partner, and have since been working with 
Ann Wilkinson, who is beginning her third 
year with the circus. 

Since the addition of Wilkinson, the 
team has been able to develop harder 
routines that they will eventually 



incorporate into the act. 

One of their new tricks will involve Reina 
crossing the wire on stilts, a stunt which is 
almost as dangerous as it is impressive. 

•*If I miss the wire with the stilts. I may 
end up eating the wire. If I fall, 1 could 
break a knee." explains Reina. who is 
presently performing the trick with safety 
lines. 

Another new trick will involve Kay riding 
a unicycle across the wire with Wilkinson 
standing on his shoulders. This is the most 
difficult two-man high-wire trick done, and 
one performed by one team in FSU circus 
history. 

Their work hasn't been without its 
setbacks. The first time Kay performed the 
chair trick without safety lines, he lost his 
balance and fell into the net. the 20-pound 
chair tumbling on top of him. Luckily, he 
escaped with only minor bruises. 

During the very next show, Kay fell 
during a different part of the chair routine, 
and again he was lucky enough to suffer no 
major injuries. 

But setbacks have not prevented the 
partners from plotting even loftier goals. 
Reina and Kay's ultimate dreams rest on 
performing a seven-man pyramid, an act 
which is unquestionably the most highly 
regarded feat in the entire circus. 

In the seven-man pyramid, the top 
person stands on a yoke that is harnessed 
to tw o people who are standing on separate 
yokes supported by the four people on the 
bottom. 

"It's the hardest trick ever done and the 
most dangerous." says Reina. "Even with 
the net, if the trick comes down, someone's 
going to get hurt." 

Although the long hours of practice, the 
occasional pain and the potential danger 
would discourage the average person. 
Reina, Kay and Wilkinson continue to 
make their climb to the high-wire platform 
nearly 20 feet above the ground. 

"Circus gives me the opportunity to do 
things, and to try to do them well, that 
most people just get a chance to dream 
about," explains Reina. "Through it, I've 
learned to look at a task and say that it's 
not impossible.** 




Mark Reina and Larry Kay 



HAVE AN AFFAII 

AT Rtcurs 

JAZZ - BY THE 
"SOUND AFFAIR 




(MEAT 




UCYCUS ^ Baieigh, 
Rampar, Roat, A-D 

MOPEDS by Puc^h and 

Moto becane 

moped Ft bicycle work done 
on all models and makes 



On The Square 



AMERICAS' 
frtESHEST ICE CREAM 



OPEN 
11-11 PM 

ntf SAT 
11AM-12PM 




PEP RALLY & 
BONFIRE 

Friday Nov. 10th 8:30 til ? 
South End Campbell StBdwin 

25c DRAFT BEER 

SPECIAL AWARDS TO MENSj 

AND WOMEN'S GROUPS 
SHOWING THE MOST SPIRITI 

(Group Registration at 8:30) 
SPECIAL GUESTS 

President Sliger 
Bill Peterson 

FSU Pep Band 
FSU Cheerleaders 

iponsored by the Scalp HunttR 



Vmericas 
freshest ice cre"' 

\1/ 



BUY ONE GET ONE 
FREE 

(sm la CREAM only) 

miY WED IN oa. 



152S W. T»» 

222-8714 



WSBH II I' » 




50'fMdM't ■ 

Late 60'S and eoriy 70't ■ yri^ Vieiiww Iw - lliew wmm^tOmmnu mHw 

Eoriy & Mid JO'S IM 

POW WOW 1978 . It't wWt yM'vi il bMa w«tii« f«r. RU Ims • tot to b« 

proud of, Hce othor major umvorsHiot. Pow Wow 1978 wl 

Florida State Universily. Homecomiiig it not just for the 

Attend Pow Wow 1978 ond feel iMi SeniMle IpMt ike 
you've Mver felt it fcrtoio* 

Sominoto Tradition - Post, Present and More M e » en*o r 17, 197S ttM fjm. Book CoapM Slidtoa 

lidwls Slodoatt • $2; at Goto Noa-Studonts • $3; at Goto $3** 

ISU Jan Band Hying lligli Great Speclocwtor firewoifc Ditptoy 

suit Ronogade (FSUs mascot) Mardiing Chieft 

Oieoitoadon Sol, fSU't No. 1 tai OooMfai of 1«7« 

Chief nnd Pri 

ADVANCE TICKET SALES: 




'Ml' 

m 
7' 

H I 



'» i ■ 

' 1 



f 



1' 



•11 



I'M 



I III*. 



at _ r 



10 / WMnewfay, November 8, 1978 FLORfOA FLAMBEAU 



ClassMed AIj 






Alcyone 90. -1© c«it 




TYmiie, FAST, EXECUTIVE 



(1 

) 




Ti 



COMHTIOM, CALL 571 
i06 BESTOFFEB 



ICftlSTEM— THE TYW$T 



F F WT 2 BDRM tHiPLEX CLOSE 
TO FSU 75 4 W UTIL 4 PHOME 
OWMROOM CALL IMRB 

AtffAII4.EAaCP0IIMY 



• tem- 
per m» 



fMe TIME TO oo nr 



•i»T«Oav 



Keep m 



t9 ytmr ruNr to rt wtll b* 



ESTlUMTES 
222 MM 




n JEAMS AT P>00« RtCHARD'S 

E^ or»»- ' % 2nC pa'f $ or>»y 

tl. Mew 4 ''^JJJ^ 'Jjj^JIJff^ 

If ( 




HOMOA SMF ms V«»«mura 

rxeaders, KMMk. Oil 
4 ThcrmoBtst. 
ContinemtBl tires, i 



> S TICKETS TO 
CALL »S 7709 




'MIKES tN T( 

rugs, curtainft, 

4 tots 0f ll >i y>eti»* 

17*3 S Monroe 22A-UU 





only S4 reg. M at 

■tCNMie'S next to PiKMix iA 
Wes^wood Shcpp«ng Certter SW-lW i 

SU^R DEAL! OLYNmti 

PROFESSIONAL TYPEWRtTEII 
G€X>0 COMOITION. ASKIM6 
CALL 




NOLIOAY POUTRAfTS »r( c mix ei i ie n* 
0»ck»9« " 5*7», 4 wra'^en only 

SI'" >c^ — w t«a»'. JB at De*m*r StijOio 
p*'.c-35's^ji»y WJW* S. ii««rie M. 



SI 9*^1511 

MOVEMBEK KAIff SPECIAL!! 

OUR REG S35 ACQ PERM Of 
S22 ORGANiG HENNA $15 

CALi. BOB 

WAREHOUSE liAIRCUTTERS. 




WALL COVER IMG 
PRESSURE WASNIM0 
rxper tenced 4 remniMe 
Call Jeff 224-7745 f«r csMflMte 



TYPiMG IBM 
SELECTRIC 57«.5M« 



e«APNICS 

It design I 
4M-5744 



ACOUSTIC FOLK JAZZ 
TMUR.FRI SATA T THg 

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ThTT**^ 
I HOPE THIS !$ THE beT t 
YOUR A SLPEB CBrEi^O A 
GREAT RGCVVATE HA?c 
GREAT TfJWE pRiQAY ir 
LOVE YA LOTS PUMF * ^* 




urph; 



an ov 



WED. MIGHT M Cm E^OB SPECIAL 
ISC OM T«IP OF THE PUB OM TMC 
PATIO itoNi 



LUCK R0B(I«»Y4« 
-T^inQ Pr ,nc«« n 
■ TMLmeS'Stert 



GAY RAP GROUPGA Y RAP GROUP 
m Tueideys *> m 3« Bryer 



A*^ SociRl Science v^, an 
Vole Pvtir Jtaksflrv «m 



Large fum. studto apt. $t35 



AfMrfmcnlt, 
St. Rci 



PART-TIME EVENINGS 

Call 2M.S1S Mpm M-F 



DO CHAIR 

CANING Good 
3- - 'a^es Caii 
evenings. 574-tSI2. 




IP lt*e iys«U»l TAU BETA 



■pfl 




JOG HOG for MtaB. Hooded Joggiog 
tops, only SB reg $15 POOR 
RICHARD'S Betweer EcKerds & 
PiiBldc in Wemwood Shcppiag Canter. 


MOPED MAJIC IfTt Veloeol 

pad Exce cond At! aCGMOn 

250 oc d-". CHEAP! S7S.ft74. 




NEW NEON BEER SIGN. 
SELL FOR t12S. OR HIGHES 

SMivc KEEP TmrmG. 


WILL 

T MO. 


BUMOY ALTO SAX M SMV. 
ASIC FOR KEN. 


TV 12 IN BLACK 4 WHITE 
BUT GOOD CONOITiON 
57S«»4 EVENINGS 


USED 
CALL 



Share house wstti pool, washer , dryer 
Central heat 4 at r. Ftrngtied except 

576-6263 



HAiVKERS FOR TRADING 

to sell 
ari 

4-11p.m., M-F. For further rnforma- 
Ran conrte by Me Trading Post 4:3i 



CEL L O M l ti»mi»dWtt plus bow S3S0 
also 

Guitar, guild FSOR, rosewood back 
Lists tor $1 100 asking $750. This is an 
excellent buy and i need Bie mmay 
Ifs only 3 mons old. CaN IMMTt. %i 



Take over contract at Oscaoto HaE 
nice room pool sauna parties 

Ca" C;rv<3< 9" 2243715 or 2226560 

1 BDR KiHf^KJRH APT FOR 
SUBLEASE.PLAZA APTS W „ 
VARO CALL 222 9951 OR 224.iai» 

Need person to suoiease nny corttract 
at Osceola Hall 3 meals OaHy. sauna, 
maid sar. Call Cindy Page at 222 5010. 



For rent 
utHities 



1 



apt 17S4n«n.all 
from FSU. 
Spjn. 



Two one-bedrm acts 6 mis 
yard unfum electric 
SnS — 818-2775. 



Sutoletlbrfmaptat Colony Out) next 

to FSU campus Assume lease e^d fall 
i;^. RentSlWmo elec 4 pnone. Call 



St. 



must have 
THE PUB 1312 W. 




E-3 ^SU 
PRESS BOX SiDE 
OVEP 114. Ui 1^60. 



A "^tCKETS ON 
BEST OFFER 



CHATEAU DE ROl APARTMENTS 
511 N. i^oocJwaro <Ma'K stuoe-^:* jn 
1 bdr. fum.< clean, qpiet. 



r 

I 




BRAND NEW ELECTRIC WINCH 
FOR BOATS OR TRUCKS 



pasl* laundnf > SMB. m 



OVERSEAS JOBS — Summer-full 
time Europe, S America, Australia, 
Asia, etc. All fields, $500-1200 
monlfily, expenses paid, sigtitseeing. 
Free into ~ Write; intemationai Job 

CA 



i 



l>.,n:!> 



MINOY FLUTE $50 222 8297 
AFTERNOONS GOOD SHAPE GOOD 
PRICE GOOD XMAS PRESENT!!! 



COBLE TERRACE 1BORM APTS 
unfurnished S1 40 fumis bed S156 pool 

11-1 M-F 

ONE BEDROOM APT. FOR SUB- 
LEASE BENCHMARK APT. CALL 



SLOPPY JOE LIVING ROOM SET 
includes 7 pieces-Nat. Ad. at $ooo 
YOUR COST- BRAND NEW $349 

send info reoue^*^. v o - . ■ 





Fast accurate typtst-l 
OwMnSTO- 



1968 Cut a - . ^ wertibie,FM cassette. 
A C runs great $900.00 firm. J 
222 5595 Bryan keep trying. 



WANTED: FOOTBALL 
TICKETS CAU. SM^4 
Oent- llpwi 

FMML RMMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM 
APT MISSION RIDGE DEC OR JAN 
S10230 * ' 2 UTIL 575-IM64 



77 Chevy Van« 
Custom paint. 



AMFMr PW SI Br 



Will pay for 3 

game 
222 9261 



tidials to FSU Fto 



72 GREAALIN, STICK, A C 
26,000 Ml. RUNS WELL. S700 

575^2165 

PINT073 AM Very good condition 
new gas tank new battery new 
I or best oHer call 576 070» 



FIAT SPIDER 
at 




«NAVY FSU TICKETS WANTED 
CALL 575-OOlt AFTER 5 
CALL 644-2840 BEFORE 

Roommate needec Nov. 10 $6750 
-l-\^fil mature non smoker to share 3 
br bouse in quiet neighborhood 
CallDOMB212-6BS5 

MOTOR DRIVE FOR CANON F 1 IN 
GOOD CONDITION PAY CASH 
CALL 2248045 OR 
JONATHAN 



I STRING TENNIS RACQUETS 
One day servtoe. Lowest prtces in 
toMi. Can BW at SMEMS 



Typing: 7Sc pg. call 306-9310. 

Typing: experienced professional 
secretary with IBM se!* correcting 
typewriter 75c to 1.00 c-' oage CaN 

3866524 Special rates ava aoie. 

The Other Bite Hair Salon Mid Plat 

form Lounge presents the following 

specials of the week: 

Mon. 9 prct. off Hennas 

Tues 20 prct. off colors 

Wed. 20 prct. o« perms, body waves 

and reiaxers. Call 224-274»ari 
in 470 W. Tennessee St. 



Let POOR PICHARD'S herr your 
pants or {mm tor only $1.50 (wash 
and dry 1st .f bring the shoes you plan 
to wear w-Riem) next to Publix in 
Mtoslwood Shopping Qmter 576-2196 
OBon7daysa 



TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE 

1975 Vega station wagon in 
condition new bralies 4 fires. Will 
explode if hit from rear S140B 
Dawn at 644-4075 M F i to 5. 

71 TR6 GOOD CONOITION, 
ONE OWNER, LOW MILEAGE 



FML now-smefcer to share very nice 
quiet Mmn torn apt close to FSU 
137-mo^VMH-l-SMopes call 5754M* 

NEED TO BUY A USED LONG 
FEMALE WINTER COAT. MEDIUM 
SIZE CALL iMHaBaftor 



Typing IBM - fait efficient 



S75-a 



•5c stoigto 
or 222-7629 



WANTED 7 FSU 



FLA TICKETS 

• toS 



APPLIANCE REPAIR 

Service on ail n>aior appliances, air 
conditioning and heating. Sales- 
reconditioned units with 90 day 
warranty. Call A^Stiall, Bay* 
599-7079 (pocket beeper) 

LICENSED 



runner 
to 



excellent condition 
Call 224-5019 




RMT FOR WTR QTR ONLY! 2 BDR 

V' BTH $1704l»-»-ViUT CHATEAU 
OEVtLLE CINDY 576-4419. 



TUTOR FOR STAT 3B14 CALL 
KAREN 574B290. 

Carpenter -bike mectianic etc. etc. . . 
needs winter P-T work. Available 
weekdays afternoons & eves. CaN 
Terry 224-5017. 



BASS LESSONS 
Jazz and Contemporary Styles 
TECHNIQUE AND THEORY 



IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! 

Send SIJO for your 2S6-page, mail 

order catalog of Collegiate Research. 
10,250 topics listed. Prompt Delivery. 
Box 25907 B, 
(2U) 477-0224 



Of tapes Re' aoi*- Ca ■ 576-5915 9 to 5- 

Sfxrt Divers! Dive trip to Morrison 
Sun. Nav. 12. CaU BarnTs 



PositianavailaMetor nnateor female 
for prof I I li ie n al babysitttog Friday 
anc Sa*,rday nights pre-school. 
Wot c lO'or* witti Older children. 
MuS'C, eiem Ea. or reiatea f^etc of 
study. Position also avattaOie for 
music or dance nriajor M F,3 M to 
0:00 Call for interview Tues-^i 
0-11AM, 4:3B-5:30PM, 305-5710 

PART TIME EVENINGS. 6-9p.m. 

3 nights. Car 
2-4p.m. Mon Fri 



f>art time derk typist, 2-2W Ivs 
CaM 170.7712 



FUEE DISCO OAMCC ^ 

Fia Rm Union 7pm INad. Thru 
X-mas Now- 1. 4 15. tor mto 



CAitOE RENTALS en Wakulla 
4 US 00. F«il day 4 Vi day. 
tfrifila * bear available. 

ave^yday except mot 

I LOVE YOU 

SUG 
FRANKIE 



DAVE Gl C«fEN GOOD LUCr » 
lOWRELEC- 0»» YOUWiuObJ 
RESENT FSU *^ ELL AS m E 
HOM EC O M ING CHIEF! i ^ 



WANT SOME ACT. ON 
VOTE PATTY JACKSON 
SOCIAL SOBICE SEAT MQ 1 



ATTN GOVERNMENT MAJOOS 

- PA'-Y ,AC«J— ^^^^^ 
AC CN PARTY 




Panhellenic's 74th Anniversary week 
ernJ Oegirtt with tt*e Fall Formal Nov. 
9, the parade, bed race, and Fair Nav. 
IB. and ends Nov. 11 

to Rw Vlr. 
>ga toi 



IMMACULATE TYPING - I'M oa 
brake I'm livin* to a 
to eat; t got holai 

can t afford txx}ze. But ! cton't want 
your synrHMthy, Hisl your typing 
business. S.75-page. 




WAKE UP! 

event of the year. 
W, at Campbell Stadium 




DAVE GLICKEN.good luck Wednes- 
day n your HOMECOMING ELECT- 
ION. It will be a weii^teserved 
victory ! ! ! Your I i ttle brother, Tom 

AOPi's, Debs, and Jayfer, ttianks for 
ttte birltiday. I really appreciated it. 
y all are the best. 

DAVEGLICKEN, 
R.P. and Linda Lou are behind 
yeu all the way. Here*s toRia 



GLMODINE HAPPY 
VlfELOVE YOU! 



Da you i»eed top score on graduate 
scttool admiss»on exam ? Take GRE 
OVA- lSAT MCAT on YOUR 
schedule and at YOUR pace. CaU 
H. 



PREGNANT? 



7177 

^ VOlir daY'! 9:3M1:30AM. TTh 6-0:00 PM 



Last year's CAMrrHONITES: Reunite 
at Big Oaddy^ Ttoirs nito 4 beat the 
dock ttw My wo used to. Sao yol 



"Over 
Draft 
at 



DAVE 4 

ROm 



GOOD LUCK 
GLICKEN, homecoming chief 
' RYAN. homaoonMRg princess 

PAT 



wed. is 

gla»7 
Duval St. 



PHI TAUS SAY 
ROBIN RYAN 
HOMECOMING 



tt*e Hump Nrte* 
$3.00 pitctier %M 
MCMe4BN. 



THEIR LITTLE 
IS THE ONE 
PRINCESS 78 



Discussion on the Bahal Fafth. 

Nov. 9, 7:30 p.m. Main Lounge Gonf. 

Rm. Any questions, call 222^33. 
^jjj 



GAY PEER COUNSELING 
IndividMal -f- Confiditi al 

untv mental heaMi 
^ Lucy Kizirian 044-3 



FRIDAY AFTERNOON SPECIAL — 
MiCHELOB beer 25 cents a gtasa. At 
THE PUNa^pJM. tSa W. Tl 

Sl^ 

To the Ladies of KKG, 
We are really looking 
I fO weo. mpnr. 
LOUO. 



Subthing now makes housecalls. If 
you live on the west side, give us a caN 
at 576-2194 and we'll deliver one of 
great sandwiches 
5:30 pM>ll:,^ 



For 
birth 



Complete Ha irstyling Wash, condi 
tion, cut & blow dry $4.50. Acid 
balance perms $15.00. Henna's 
neutral or color-S7.flO Short hair or 

'ifLJ?' A" t>y 
studeiMB under supervision of quali- 
fied instructors. Tall. College of 
Barber styllnfl^221 Appalachee 
Pkwy. Call B77-3aM tor OBPt dOOOd 
A6ondays. 

APPLIANCES 

Will buy and-or haul off your 
ap plian ces. Call Marshall days 
599-7179 (pocket b e e p e r ) evenings 



. _ - - ing , 
control or health into, call the 
' " Rtemen's Health 
2249600 



FACIAL 4 BODY HAIR REMOVED 
Permanently by Electrolysis. Deep 

cleaning facial treatment, Regina 
Arxer, electrologist. By appoii^^nent 

Charge Ac«pted. 

MICHELOB SPCCIAL 
-•Sc A GLASS 
$1.75 a PITCHER 

NOON TO MIDNIGHT EVERY WEO. 
PAIN.'S 



Tl»e Other B f - 3 j.atOB p««^ 
No ne - formerry of IHiialQo f * « , 
Infroductory special wtOi N«» mi 
hair cut Can 224-2749 ar «eB a oi 
W. Tennessee. Ask for N«na 

CHI PHI beat the P' 

" / II! You're the best, loprew 
it. WO lowe yu and support yw IN 

~ f!f! 

COMIC BOOK CONVEMTION 
NOV. 11 HILTOM MOTEL 
224-7391 or SIMM 
It.-»N00WTI14:1 

greg J, Thanx for putting up wi» mi 
this w e e k . I love you ' D J 

Room Ryan, good luck tOdSyVWrt 
number one. Love, DJ 

HAPf»Y BIRTHDAY DAWN! fror 
your office buddy & dancing ranrw^ 
LJ 



Writer, If you are to cor"K* 
on my windows. piCMC u» 
le ttie shave crtKR 
lOMiWrioOit.COl 



TODAYS TRADING POST TREAT 
FREE bewerage with the purcnatt ■* 
a vegetarian delight for si n kr<.^ 
it off wiBi a stoaming Met 9 



BIG PLATTER OF SPAGHET' 
$1 50 AT THE PUB 1311 Tam S« 
llam-tpm Wed.'s 



GE PRISON 
warmmg up th« t)«J 

The Garn'^* P*'' 



GAMAAA PHI BETA MilreSS Mar 

George Prison, ^h-ii 
^ Ov HQ. \ Are you reiO y 

AAATT R ESS MAN GEORGE 
PRISON. 

WeLoveYeu. 




TO ALL MY SUPPORTERS . 
THANX I HOPE FOR J'-- 
CONTINUED SUPPORT IN ^ 
PRINCESS RUNOFF WEDS 
ROBIN RYAN 



DEAR SIGMA KAPPAS - 
THE PHI TAUS SAY - ^ 
LET'S DO IT FOR HOAAECOWi"^ 



VISION AND HEARING TESTS 

Rm 412 FSU ItoatWi Ctr. 



LIBERTY GARDENS 
Organic minerals for ttie backyard 
gardener Herb seeds fruiting midBet 
House plants Closa to 

1 



CAROLYN 

REMEMBER ME? 
CAN WE TALK? SAY HI TO TERE- 

THE FLASHER 

MEGAN FEEHAN: 
I'm tiaving a party this weeiiend 
CaN ma. TliaBBI wNB Rw 



TIM AND STEVE: 
Ttienks tor another 
wMtand, but cwMsw 

find it. 

Tinool 


wi W and CFOcy 
entcwtwehinwa 

sy and Woonolsy 


SO STRICKLANO- 


GOOD LUCK 


POR HOMECOMINB 

Your •'rBiimoiyn man 
MohOHoa. 


\ CHIEF 1970! 


lager" at toe Phi 


GAMMA PHI BETA 
George Frison. 
You^ HOI Are you 


MolRooo AAaow 
ready for bod? 




ELAAODINE-HAPPY 2Mt 



Rho PM f»i - W» Is back. Gutter and 
Dusty, a definite 4 Roger on return 
winter flop to Rome Ga. 

cuz BO'S via 27 will roll 

Lave those Dixie tou 



REWARD TO FINDER-^ 

Lost dOB$ 2 yr- OW t>'»<^J*''', 
shipird. mato long-sh ha r 1 ^ 

btand golden retriever, 'e^^a' 
collars. Both dogs letooec ^ 

inner thigh with S S^no - '^^ 
Closely. If seer or found P^*^ 
i77.N«. 997 3069. 222 8692. 3g ;^ 

LOST AROUND LAKE OOADfgJ^ 
RD YELLOW CAT. IF $ES« ^ 
DIANA $75-3153 

LOST Four keys on • P****^^ 

chain with P»»«*»or**^ « jl,rt 
pioosecall 644-3M6 Smli 



It's fOWiAMdl SCR 
tlMiiR'n Ib orde 

mck DUr 
IrcBdlcB her young tea 
opciiW Missl^ 
lntghtiiiMo(»^* AU. 1 
I tolkiw«d by South Alab 
as the Scminolcs tm\ 
...ibHtoNi schedule t> 
against such powerh 



Assistant coa( 



uSorsociet: 




ipremier! 




BIRTHDAY .pT^ 

' ^' J«m Fair SJjif^' 
D f N BORG 
r=OLK JAZZ 
lAT AT THEALLtV 

l^E FRIDAY l^ir^* 

1dts_pu^'^^ Night 
Luck robin hyai, 

-ence Ma |or» 

[KEN- GOOD Lurif 

ACTION 
' JACKSON 
■NCE SEAT NO 1 




[pMICS AAAJORS 
^ JACKSON WED. 

Ask for Nena. 

I ' f Pi Kraps tonight in 
1)u re the best, so prove 
* and support you . Tht 
xxxxoooo IHI 

BOOK CONVENTION 

>V. n HILTON MOTEL 
224 7391 or 576 5043 
12:00 NOON TIL4 30 



for putting Up with mt 
'« youl DJ 

>ood luck todty YooTt 

|.ove, DJ 

HDAY OAWNI from 

idy ti danclni i 



If you are to continue 
windows, please use 
the shave cream 
1 1 coutdr— dit. GDI 

kDING POST TREAT: 
je with the purchase of 
flight for $1.77 And top 
steaming bowi of 
tp or natural snooks 
|nty Food Coop. 

[r of SPAGHETTI 
PUB 1312 W. Tann. St. 



.'S 



IISON 

\ing up the l>ed for out 

?ss man. 

The Gamma Pt'is 

BETA Matress AAan, 

ftre you roody for !»•<<? 

^AN OiKMIGE 

e Love You. 

The Gamma Ph'S 



Y SUPPORTERS 
HOPE FOR YOUR 
SUPPORT IN THE 
RUNOFF WEDS l"' 



V KAPPAS — 

JS SAY — 

FOR HOMECOMING 




IDTOFINDER! 
old WackAtan gernnan 
longish hair, i yr 
retrlovor, female, jw 
dogs tatoowl o^/SSl 

th S.S no . must WJJ 
n or found P'easaW' 
W, 222 8692. 385-7^ ;^ 

D LAKE BRAOFORO 
r CAT. IF SBIK CALL 

3. 

eys on a P'«f '^J^JJ 
Holographs, if 
MM Small Rawafg; 



lean overcome inexperience 



by QMViM widiy 



It s roandMI teasoii tad tempered 
enthusiasm b tlie otder of Ae day. 

That's the mood of FSU womea's 
basketball cotdi Diane Murphy as she 
readies her young tesn for theb season 
opener against MMssippi State Friday 
night in MoHk, Ala. The Bulldogs wOl he 
followed by Sooth AlalMuraa the neit ni^ 
as the Seminoles emhaik on tl^ year's 
ambitious schedule that indades games 
tk!ainst such powerfaouses as Memphis 
State, Alabama and Tulane as well as 



tra^tiooal foes Florida, Stetson and South 
Florida. 

With II freshmen on her 16-person 
squad. Murphy lists inexperience as one of 
the team's primary weaknesses. Off last 
year's 19-15 crew, FSU only returns 
sophomores Jackie Arnold, Rose Harper, 
Karen Barineau, junior Cherry Rivers, and 
senior Cheryl Weigand. However, of those 
five, four are starters, with Weigand being 
the team's **sixth man."' 

Another weakness appears to be 
rebounding. Even without heralded 6-foot 
freshman Laine Lasseter, who has yet to 




Assistant coach Judy Battle . . . women looking for 20 win season 



AMERKAN ^ 
OUKER SOCIETY 1 

This space contributed by the publisher 



FLAMBEAU CLASSIFIED 



mmwnm 



RUCO' 

f Rf. A S \ 



••••• 9^ •••••• •••••• 

: BAKER AUTO I 

PARTS : 

Student Discounts I 

20B North Adams I 

••••••••••••••••••• 



JAZZ 



Features 
Rill Kpnnedv Sax 

Piano 



UVTiXJLIOEIVT ALTERNATIVES 




6:00 p.m. 
Ch. 11 



p.iii. 
Ch. 11 



Vld«H» Center 
1078 



Might : FSV SPECTRUM Hiakes Us 
jpreMierX Hiwlc, faiterview, a MeBUil chaUenge! 
fToMorrow: OUTLOOK describes the plight of 
9. ralafaig amey far chari ty at Florida State. 

Communicationsl 



"•mi' 




Theresa Tinsley 



practice with the team due to pie-seasoii 
ankle surgery, the Seminoles are short on 
lehounding height, with only Barineaii 
established as a proven leaper. 

Yet those wealmesses, ineiperienoe and 
rebounding, don't concern Murphy that 
much. 

'*Our assets are quickness and d^th," 
Murphy noted. **A11 our freshmen ate very 
talented, and by January or February we'fl 
be able to compete widi any team in the 
nation." 

One of the quickest on the team is Teresa 
Tinsley, a 5-5 ball handler from Oriando. 
The lone freshman in tiie starting line-up, 
Tinsley will be an importsnt cog in 
Murphy's offense at her point guard 
position. Of Tinsley, Murphy says, "She's 
still making some freshman mirtakes, but 
her play is what is going to make us go. She 



lady 'Uohs opm 



has to play weO for os to win." 

In Murphy's system the point guard's 
importance is paramount. In ranning a M 
oflfSense (a point guard, two whigs and two 
posts), it is the point's responsibility to get 
the ball to the shooters and oonteol the 
tempo of play. Murphy Hkes her teams to 
run at every opportunity and nudnttin a lot 
of movement away from the baU, setting up 
screens for die dioota's. 

The key to that type of play, besides the 
abilities the point guard, is how wdl, and 
quiddy, the "bosses" dioot. in that respect 
FSU returns a trio of net-burn^s. Both 
Jackie Arnold and Boae Harper averaged in 

scorer Cherry Bivers oHea tnned games 
turn to BASKETBALL^ page 12 



GAME PUU4S FOR SATURDAY NIGHT 

(or how to cure a Soturdoy Night Fever ) 

Football seoson may be a tinie for 
socmI gfltberNigs 



If your game plans rnckido attending a pre> or post-g^e party 
where alcohMidic beverages are aeivMl ami you deck^^o rMi« 
remember: 

•Know your limit 

•Eat while you drink 

•Sip slowly. Drink for enjoyment, don't gulp for effect. 
•Remember, the purpose of a party is togetherness, not 
tipsiness. 
•DONT 
If you Mnk, 

Drink responsibly, you'll enjoy the 'Noles' victory a whole lot 
more. 



For SMire InforiMtioii cdl 644-2428 or tfbp by 
THE MCOHOL INFORMATION CENTp 



Ml 




) 



■■" <• 

m 



•'i 



f 





Irij 



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■! 









JIMf A 
WBJ. 




p:;E*f writer^ p-:^ : i -es . lfc»'Sii:- 1 

Hit .iiail.. It- ••Sfc it. " ' 




1 



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2-2 



GUCKKy 

1978 
{Muecomii^ Chief 

VOTE TODAY!! 



PdL PSoL Aidv, 



laMiliiililti 



»«iiittttiikV 




Jogging backlash grows stronger 



15^ 




VoIm ata ry 
Actios Ccater 



224-0581 




Mj oinciais wan 



o 





ore CIVIC center liglits or meir money back 



by ctofmi voft 



Florida State University's ttadent 
t/overnment plans to get back FSU's $9.7 
mi] i ion contribotioa for the Tallahassee- 
Leon County CMe Center unless the Board 
of Regents agrees to certain student 
demands, an SG source said yesterday. 

FSU Student Body President Neal 



Frtedman and Senate President Randy 
Drew have called a press conference at 10 
this morning on the ninth floor of the 
Capitol to discuss the matter. 

SG plans to announce at the press 
conference it will ask the BOR not to 
approve amendments to the civic center 
contract without SG*s approval, said the 
source, an SG official who demanded 



anonymity. The BOR has resolved to 
approve the amendments, but has not yet 

given its official okay. 

The four-party civic center agreement 
was signed bv the city, county. BOR and 
state of Florida in March. 19"'6. Recent 
amendments to that agreement would raise 
the cost of building the center from $24 to 
$33.2 million and eliminate both a 



Florida 



Tkunday 
November 9, 1978 




Serving Tallahassee for 66 years 



2.200-seat auditoriuro mmA a 1,000-car 
parking garage 

The SG official said he feels the 
amendments have not merely changed the 
original contract, but have made U an 
entirely different contract. 

Under the student fee resolution passed 
last year by the Florida legislature SG 
approval is required on any new contract 
entered into by the BOR using building 
fees. If the amendments do render the old 
contract void and require the adoption of a 
new one. SG approval would then be 
required. 

The official added SG probably would not 
sign the contract as amended until the BOR 
or Civic Center Authority agrees to two 
stipulations: 

•FSL"s two varsity basketball teams 
should be allowed to practice in the civic 
center arena (which would free Tully Gym 
for student use). 

•In 1980. student building fees will be 
used to build an auditorium on the FSU 
campus similar to the one axed from civk 
center plans. 



Askew: No special ERA session 



by ssifi ifiNI#r 



MIAMI — Equal R^ts Amendment 
supporters lost tfaeur newly-wcm majority in 
the Senate yesterday and Gov. Reubin 
Askew said he will not call a special session 
of the legiskitiire to ratify ERA this year. 

Askew, who iMuUy wa^fted'fSi ]oki Florida 
to the national ratificatfon before leaving 
office Jan. 2, said a special session would 
not be "very practical" in view of vote 
switchhig and defeat of a little State ERA on 
Tuesday's baflot. 



To justify a session, he said, would 
require a ''tremendously strong sentiment" 
for ratification which does not appear to 
exist at this time. 

Sen. Pete Skinner, D-Lake City, changed 
his mind Tuesday and said he would vote 
against ERA. 

Gov.-elect Robert Graham, an ERA 
supporter, said hewas not inclined to attach 
great significance to rejection of the 
proposal to add a special provision to the 
state constitution outlawing sex 



This pr(^)osa] merely west down as 
Fioridians voted "no" across the board to 
nine pnq>osed changes in basic law, he 
said. 

Another senator, Vernon Holloway of 
Miami, said he would announce today the 
results of a survey of constituent feelings he 
took to help him decide whether to come out 
for the ERA. 

A switch by HoUoway would cancel out 
Skinner and allow ERA forces to hang onto 
their bare 21-19 majority. 

ERA forces picked up two crucial Soiale 



seats in Tuesday's baUoling, but iott tw 
other races which would have given them 
badly-needed insurance voles. They also 
failed to win voter approval of Reviik» 2, 
the state constitutional ameadBieat dubbed 
"the litde ERA," and ttey concede tlii^'s a 
psychological setback. 

Skinner said he's changiug his vote 
because Congress gave ESiA opponents a 
raw deal when it extended the national 
deadline for ratification by three years-plus, 
states which have already approved the 
amendment thoM have been given the 
option of changing their ndnds, he said. 



^^^^^ 



■J 

SI 



After CaTcox and All, he's catering FSU 



'P&ople are always asking me 'How 
does it feel to cook for President 
Carter? How does it feel to cook for 
Muharmned Ali?' I tell them it's a lot 
ofha^¥¥orK that's how it feels. They 
say 'ButRuiim, notsveryhodyffetsa 
chance to cook for the Pmskkntl' 
But the way I look at it, note\mYbody 
gets a chance to eat Rufus Hogan's 
cooking. They tell me I'm conceited. I 
say sure: you got to be good to be 
conceited, and I'm good. How can I 
cook for Muhumad Ali? It's simple! 
I'm the Muhammed Ali of food. ' 
— Rufus Hogan, chef. 




photo by taly aincluaky 



by hnlnii f nlnfaiQ 



Try catching him at midiufht. 

Chef Hogan will taft to you anytime; but by this late 
hour the kitchen is quiet. He may have time to renuniaoe 
with you, to f^ilosophize; and, if you're lucky, to offer yon 
delectable tidbits of t o morro w 's buffet. 

By midnight Hogan has been at woik for 18 hours, 
except for one dash to his apartment for "a glass of 
brandy and a two-hour nap.'* Nevertheless, he's happy 
now: this kitchen is his kingdom, and he's got all to 
himself. 

Rufus Hogan is the new main man in the campus 
cafeteria. In a culinary coup d'etat, this high-class chef 
was hired away from another kingdom — Walt Disney's 
magic one — three weeks ago. He arrives with a fancy 
reputation and a fanatic determination to revoltttioniie 
food service here. 

With a job history that includes stints cooking for 
Muhammad AH, the King of Nigeria, Jesse Jackson, 
Lena Home, President Carter and the entire Magic 
Kingdom, why is this man smiling in the FSU kitchen? 

'This is a chance for me to do my own thing, get some 
recognition," explains Hogan. *'At Disney, anything you 
do, you do for the company. There's no personal credit. 

"I want to share with everybody what I know about 
food. 1 don't keep anything a secret. I'll teach students 
from the hotel and restaurant school anything I know. I'll 
share my recipes with kids from the cafeteria; I'd share 
them with somebody who walked in off the street." 

Listening to angry students gripe about cafeteria food, 
one might fear for the safety and sanity of a campus chef. 
So far. though, Hogan seems quite sane and not at all 
wocrted. He qmipathizes with a student on the meal plan 

turn to CHEF, pagm H 



m 1 

14' 



f 








^00' 



- —1 JCTjfe:- 



.,1 rfiJE 



'» - - rr-- lit ''T Mgir ir -it 



i ' ' ...Hit mt '-»*iy»-**r::-. | 

•s*r5y5'r-jf«J,a«li**: IT tie Jitn 
lie 



in tie 




BEERSAIE 










BEER TOWN 



PEP RALLY & 



BONFIRE 

ffflday Noif. lOlh 
Sou th Bid CmpAMiA 

DRAFT BEER 

SPECIAL AWARDS TO MEN'S 

AMD WOMEN'S GROUPS 
SHOMAMG TH£ MOST SPIiUT 

(Group R ey i rtia B u n at 830) 

SPECIAL GUESTS 

President Sliger 
Bill 

Sol 

FSU Pep Band 
FSU Cheerleaders 



Hunters 



FS 
thr 



FSU mav hf 
over reverse 

The comr''^ •* 
AUn Bakkt 

discrimina 
Michigan man 
Nfchere this dis4.r 
hopes to prove ' 

Peter 0>''"'"- ' 
Public Bruavu 
University in M* 
created position 
manager. The nt 
a federal grant 
Corporation 
Production ' ' 
that only v^uiucn 
for the new post- 

r<»!linson ct»rv 
most hiatan' » t r 

• The PBC 
minorities and 
grant creates n< 
which otherwise 

ColIinsi)n teels. 
the spirit of the ( 
WFSU-TV diK s n 

•'Public Stan 
j^ovemmental 
Communications 

they are tied to g 
such grants " 

• If the Ku K! 
station if they hirt 
t." Collinson aH 

University At id 
complied with e 
lecision. Until h 
»it in depth, how 
x w c e m in g feder 
Hewed in tight of 

CdUiison said 
lectttse the Bakk 
looonttiig to the 
{TMrts, Dmaiel 

tlie occasi 
aid, **the courts 



t* 



"tt is a coaditi 
/aats to hire som 
hey may, hut t 
y aati. " 

FREE DELIV 



j iai2 Wast 

1 Any order o 
3 Any order 



FREED 



PI 



( 



REE DEUVER 



AMBEAU Thursday, Hwmntm9, 1978 / 3 



FSU reverse discrimination suit 
threatened over television post 




by Jim COX 

F SI" mav be the next battlefield in the controversial war 
,;vcr reverse discrimination. 

The complicated Supreme Court decision on the recent 
Alan Bakke case may have left many areas where reverse 
discrimination apparently occurs untouched. One 
Michi^jan man feels that federal grants is one such area 
where this discrimination is blatantly occuring^ aad he 
hopes to prove this is wrong by suing FSU. 

Peter Collinson, a white male, presently works for the 
Public Broadcasting station at Central Michigan 
I Diversity in Mt. Pleasant, but he has applied for a newly 
created position al WFSU-TV termed assistant program 
manager. The new position is made possible only through 
a federal grant distributed by the Public Broadcasting 
Corporation according to Jim Moran, WFSU-TV 
Production Manager. The grant stipulates in its guidelines 
that only women or minority group members are etigible 
for the new positions. 

Collinson considers this, levers^ dtscrimliiataoft la i|s 
most blatant form 

"The PBC grant provides for a training position for 
minorities and women," Moran said yesterday. "The 
grant creates new positions in public televistoa statioiis 
which otherwise wouldn't be there." 

Collinson feels, however, that such grants are not **in 
the spirit of the (Bakke) law" and has threatened suittf 
WFSU-TV does not seriously consider his application. 

"Public stations claim that they don't want 
governmental interference through the FFC (Federal 
Communications Commission)," Collinson said, **but then 
they are tied to government by the guideBnes present in 
such grants." 

if the Ku Klux Klan came and offered a grant to a 
station if they hired a white male, I wonder if they'd accept 
t," Collinson added. 

University Attorney Jerry Jaski said FSU thus far has 
:omplied with every aspect of the complicated Bakke 
lecision. Until he could consider Collinson 's threatened 
iuit in depth, however, Jaske said simply that "questions 
:onceming federal funds or grants would hmwe to be 
'iewed in light of the Bakke decision." 

Collinson said he may have a legitimate grievance 
because the Bakke case has outlawed quotas in hiring. But 
iccording to the national director of these PBC training 
grants, Daniel Del S<dar, Collinson does not. 

in the occasion that such suits have occured," Solar 
aid. "the courts have ruled against the plaintiff in all 
nstances." 

it is a conditional grant," he added. "If a university 
/ants to hire someone who doesn't meet the conditions, 
hey may, but they won't do so with these training 
rants." 



3 
1 



1 

3 



1 



FREE DELIVERY - FREE DELIVERY - FREE DEU 




1312 West Tcfmessee Street 224-9065 
Any ofder over $3.00 - 2 Free Pepsi's 
Any Ofdwow $5.00 - 4 Free Pepsi's 

.mL W Cfmtm Pius »Z50 

Lrg[. IT Cheese Pizzs $4.00 

Ffl^ DEUVERYIbr sM menu Hmm 

Mon. — Fri. 5 til closing 
Sat. — Sun. 12 til closing 



; PIZZA - GRINDERS - SALADS 

<Offer good thru Nov. 2Gth) 

REE DEUVERY - FREE DELIVERY - FREE DELr 



'If the Ku Klux Klan came and 
offered a grant to a station if they 
hired a wiiite male» I wonder if 
they'd accept it' 

^ Peter Collii^on 



Nationwide, such PBC grants provide for only about 30 
positions, according to Mormo. These 30 nepwcat only s 
"drop in the bucket*' when compared to the total asBib^ 
of people involved in public broadcasting. 

Collinson 's suit would not be filed until tlie positkm has 
been fiUed by WFSU-TV in January, bat Moran stated that 
'*If we can't fill the position with a wman, m) one will be 
hired" because of the nature of the particular grant 
WFSU-TV has received. 

The PBC money will pay half of the estimated $14,000 
salary for the new position, which is the only programming 
training post at WFSU-TV currently receiving such a 
grant. 

Collinson has threatened similar suits in three other 
instances, but these too are pending the filling of the 
broadcast positions. One of these other stations is 
WRUF-TV. part of the University of Florida broadcast 

network. 

Collinson said, however, that he would seriously 
consider the position here if it were offered. 



Graduates 



BECX)ME A LAWYER S ASSISTANT. 



• Program appfowadl^r 

• Day and Evening 

• Emptoyfnanl 




\ 



□ MIIMY 

FB. 12-IMY 11 JUNE 11 -SEPT 5 SEPT. »-OfC 14 

THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR 
PARALEGAL TRAINING 

3376 Peachtree Rd., NE 
Atlanta, Ga. 30326 
404/266-1060 



0 



A RepresentatlvB from Th€ National Cwtfr for Paralegal Training's 
Lawyer's Assistant Program will be on campus on Friday, Nov. 1 7 from 
9:00 a.m. • 4:00 p.m. at tfia Placement Office to meet interested stu- 
dents. For more Information contact ttte Placement Office or Tt»e Nm- 
tional Center for Paralegal Training. 3376 PaacMrta Roatd. ME. Suite 
430. Atlanta, Qoorgia 30326, (404) 266-1090. 



WHO? 



name -brand 
affordable prices. 



Poor Rk^ard's b pleaded 
to provide you with quality, 

thing at ^ 

5r 



From bottom to top, 
Terry is wearing Straight 
"Cords" from New York Jean, 
Co. $12. Ginger Jones — sheer/ 
sexy with Bat Sleeves $1Z50 



WHO ELSE 



Between Eckerds & Publix in the Westwood Shopping Center 57S-2196 M-Sat 10-10 Sun 1-6 




ti 



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tne scnait Tyronrrtl' canceliec oian 



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tnt srtrcotiC'-ciasi citizrui ina tne- once 
snoeic nav-t jRecm. A .scra^^t 



nc longe* 




ntmioiiexuais w tin* s oct e tv 



:t soBiessa^ s 

r ig ffe ct mosxTt fears abont 
- tneremsa u nasi tut Eaua 

us 





taste fe*" HMapiaiity. 

:.,r. Equal E^^t^- Amra-aniCT' 
cn iKw^ oir o' imstratior' witr 

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commiiiim . Ijail: wiiai 

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wa& u-t:2" L simmss^ red i& 
Hmm u mt LiBcrr. fial iwiirrt 
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mhuu. f MMxd iaxr — wk> amt wcmic 
cid}^ex4 Heary Fon^ Imi^ ttte: 

saaiTiec. 
was an 

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lura&pireil lo , w^ki 
of worr tac^ ipctp tt tter 

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canfcii* imomscs:: rn- simac" 

fastnn- -d'?^ hir: -^^ . 

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VOL »*uri itrir.ftr.. 



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JHldltiKasa piir::nit^aDi^ imagr a; 
tikmx. Yma cmik si on aru. ou} a 
pB\'fiaime! su: . anc dii: ii on wad 
|>eQp4em'oui-„ re£.r-ir' vol iiat yaii 
were a wel-Dai. sxecunvt — al 
wili: £ moaiciic c emoncii^ 
mvesimeii: SmiDi^ w^ei—oefnie*: 
Tiiies o* tashior to- smrot:. 

bus. 

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sameTinng H£t that no 
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someoBeiii o^^cxalis 'tt^v m 

ihf airector o . ruMwa siiette- 
— ai!\-Tiiix!^ An-: men: arr al 

arouru ir DUit tssaa^ tiittfe lar 
canii&hsts wnoamnalniic' Tmiiw 

li.- ilk: tm ir trti i?Ta\ 

ms: can<;nni!J:nfSv cIoIIks an 

mo^. Beotiie ^ 
nowa^lavN 

sTiiyaa §.imU' JifiaiTx ■■; 

tii|niif!.N Tl«!»'^ 'Canir aim^ w»rh .^B 



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r. 







Be a\| 




In this IctlcT I 
and bother your 
FPltG (Florida 

Groap) •^f**' 
o vefoiBcnt . 

f%ft, I would 

alliaace with the 

issue. Being ina 

Mark Beasabat 
have iKard front 
vyoitkl particular 
ponver hungry 
i opponent (one H 
Friedman. I do 
flMch eiU^. 
helped reUtive 
nriMTities) on ca 
body a« a whok 
at least be is m> 
the pteviotts ad 
have proven mv 
the matter at h.. 

Both of th 
gentlemen ha 
concerning FPli 
fiiadlng used wil 
money needed f 
students in tf 

Sudde 



Unless you con| 
making time in 
houses, there's 
around you. WoH 
own as human in 
man alone has ej 
years of Westerij 
But what's a q 
face of what is 
finds himself con| 
the number of ii 
himself to. Hen J 
without the mytH 
light delicately pi 
qualities man li| 
ignoring all th« 
feelings, desit 
thing. 

Today's mai 
responsible to 
that fellow worn a| 

like he sees hi 
as being mot 





d aware of FPIRG facts 



Letters 



In thii letler I propoM to furtlier ooofiite 
and bother your readers over the caneat 
FPIRG (Florida Public Interest Eeaeaich 
Group) affair goimg oa ia aMkmt 
govemnieiit. 

First, 1 would like to dear myself of 
alliance with the opposing forces over this 
issue. Being inactive in the political scene 
at this ottiversity, I have never met Senator 
Mark Bensabat. However, from what I 
have heard firom friends, I do not flunk I 
would particularly like this pompous and 
power hungry individual. As for his 
opponent (one of many). President Neal 
Friedman. I do not care for him all that 
much either, as his term in office has 
helped relatively few students (mostly 
minorities) on campus and not the student 
body as a whole. In all fairness, however, 
at least he is not being impeached (unlike 
the prevlovs administration). Now that I 
have proven my neotrmlity, let's niO¥e to 
the matter at hand. 

Both of these distinguished (?) 
gentlemen have a good argumeat 
concerning FHRG. On the pro ade, the 
fiindhig used wSI most deMtely raise the 
money needed for fliis worthwhile cause. If 
studei^ in an upper level sdKK^ of 



e<tacation caaaot fumrmiticr lo ohtaia a 

feiuad then they doa't eeatiy desa¥c to he 
here. Furdieraiofe. both aides agyee 
FPIBG is aecessary. That it aol arhat is 
being argued here. Thus, it both sides 
i^gree we aeed FPntG. tiiea flie $2 
lefuadable tiation uierease is an eacelleat 
way of making FPIRG a real^. 

On the other haad. hamg a refaadaUe 
fee is dirty business practice. Saistag 
money in this maaaer is based oa people 
forgetting to pick «p their ictod. 
Therefore, the more people who fotget, the 
larger the monies collected. 

There is a priadple involved here aad I 
believe it is a sooad one. Why can't a 
consumer advocate organization fund itself 
in a better way than the one they have 
planned, one subject to controversy about 
being fair. Just because iUlph Nader 
proposes a method of raising money, is it to 
be taken as the only method poosttile? Is 
his word the gospel? 

Ultimately, the decision is up to you and 
me. Politics^ infighting will stall aaythiag 
productive coming from student govern- 
ment and the leaders of the pro-FPIRG 
petitimi drive will continue with their 
movement blinded by their goal. In 
conclusion, the next time you are 
approached on this matter, be aware of the 
facts. You will thai be able to make a 
b^er decision because of them. 

Naaw Withheld 



Suddenly women are people too 



Unless you concentrate all your hours on 
making time in the front yard of sorority 
houses, there's a very recognizable fact 
around you. Women are coming into their 
own as human individuals, the distinction 
man alone has enjoyed throughout all the 
years of Western civilization. 

But what's a man to do? Today, in the 
face of what is known as liberation, he 
finds himself confronted with at least twice 
the number of individuals he must account 
himself to. He must see women as they are 
without the myths, without the soft movie 
light delicately placed, accentuating all the 
qualities man has traditionallv enjoyed, 
ignoring all the rest not su ^icsired; like 
feelings, desires, needs — that sort of 
thing. 

Today's man must not only be 
responsible to his fellow man: it includes 
that fellow woman now . He's got to see her 
like he sees himself: as a complex person, 
as being more than just an imitation 



haircut and a pair of jeans. In fact, it's 
almost like he must overcompensate. Kind 
of play catch-up ball until things are on an 
even keel. 

There *s a huge responsibility here. A 
mafl ttts to be very sure of himself, sure of 
others, before he can accomplish anything 
worthwhile. He stands to lose himself if he 
spends all his omscious hours fulfilling 
others, men or women. He can shut 
himself off to otfiers, men and womea, and 
Bve the Irastrated life of the hermit in the 
desert. 

No longer can a man of self-worth play 
the double standard of fairness to men and 
indlffereaoe to women. Sure it*d be nice 
that way: a pet tlili^%peaks back and 
comforts you is always better than- the 
mute kind. Our fatiiers enjoyed it, theirs 
did and so on, hot the game has dianged 
dramatically for us. That's just the way it 
is. The socmer it's recognized the better 
things proceed for aH of us. 



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6 / Thursday, Novenn,ber 9, 1978 FLORiDA -^AMBEA:^ 



God was at gay conference 



I wish to address the letter of Mr. Steve Figard which 
appeared in the October 24 issue of The Flambeau 
concerning the recent conference on "The Church and 
Homosexuality" held at the United Ministries Center. 
While the points raised by Mr. Figard in his letter were not 
altogether clear to me, I take his theme to be one of anger 
thai scnpture can be taken "out of context" and used (or 
should I say "misused") to affirm homosexuality, a view 
which he suggests is clearly and irrefutably contrary to 
God's "expectations of his creation/* 

Let me recapitulate his criticisms of the conference: (1) 
It denied the authority of the Bible and ignored the 
existence of God: (2) it extolled man's own present 
knowledge and wisdom; (3) it sought to "distract attention 
from ourselves and point to the inconsistencies of others" 
in citing that some scriptural bans (e.g., dietary rules) are 
univtTsally ignored; (4) it took portions of God's word "out 
of context" so as to ser\e its own purpose; and (5) while 
dutifully acknowledging Christ's message of love, it 
%nored God's "absolute truth revealed in the Bible." 

An extraordinary view, to my mind. While I was unable 
to attend all of the conference, I found it to be none of 
these things. I certainly did not feel that the conference in 
any way discredited the Bible or ignored God's existence. I 
can't recall that human knowledge and wisdom were 
extolled as having put mankind higher on "the ladder of 
human evolution," thus presumably independent of God. 
And in examining the Levitical proscriptions, the 
conference hardly succeeded in distracting attention from 
homosexuality; rather, it attempted to treat a serious 
theologkal point which, 1 note. Mr. Figard makes no 



attempt m dkcndk. And wiA respect to ^"^"^'^f^ 
taken "out of context." I csa oaiy reply tfctt pcfkflot fcr 

him it was. In disciissiDf aadeot moto aad 

customs and word meanings, the corfBieaoc, tf 

attempted to understand the scripWe « * 

would choose to call "in coBtcit." ^ 

I surmise that Mr. Figard and I cttBe amif 
conference w ith our vastly differing pomti ef view jm h^ 
because we went seeking different things. (The motto witti 
which he closes his letter, "My mind is aiede^^ — doB*t 
confuse me with facts," is a reveafing iDsighl.) Soeic 
things I did feel very strongly at the cuafcr e n oe; tlic fcwe of 
God and the presence of the Holy Spirit such as odst any 
time two or three or more are gathered io ffis MBM; a 
feeling of excitement of and joy in learning soiuetliiBg acw 
about myself and my faith; an increased unders t a mting of 
w hat it means to be a homosexual in the kingdom of God 
and of what it means to love one another in the body of 
Christ; above all, the unmistakable realization that we 
were all witnesses to the work of the Holy Spirit. 

And so I think we need not worry about scripture being 
taken out of context, or that "God s absolute truth" is 
being ignored. I invite Mr. Figard to join with me in a 
common attempt to discern what the Spirit has in store for 
us. to seek God's will for both of us in our lives, and to 
learn more fully what it means to rejoice in truth. And in 
the process, I suspect, we shall both be changed, and we 
shall discover for ourselves in greater depth the meaning 
of those words of the Man of Galilee: "Behold, I make all 
things new." 

EdwafdL. Btaaton 




PERSCUSSIOX 
ENSEMBLE 

Piays KliuclwlwiM'. 

SABRE DAIVCE 



Sm. N*r. 11 $tlS pjn. i 

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RAIN 



Sigma Phi statuette is racist 



Editor: 

It's dtsturbing to find Mataat tadiai stffl 
existent in Tallahassee. Most pmAedc is 
the fact that it is found here on the caanpBS 

of Fioiida Stale Vmveaky. The brottiers of 
Sigma Phi Epsikm have deemed^ it 
oecessaiy to let k he kaowa eiactly hoar 
they fied ahoot the Mack stsdeirt popidos 
of Florida State, evideat by pwdiy 

their firateniity house. 
Theie staadi a statuette of a fittle Mack 
adoaraed in a bngftt red jacket with 
itstietcfaed arm that once held a 
fauifterB. A laaton of igaotaaoe. The 
lantern is goae hat the i g aor a i ic e pievafls. 

M you aie Mack aad have fived la 
the South, that statae represents the 
Ideology that: * There's a |rtaoe for yon 
people, he8 prefendily, hut we'fl pve you 
i^ bmtk of the has hnlead; so don't use 
our rest-fooais or our water-iouatwas — i£ 
yoa caa read, niggers, yoars is dearly 
aurked* 'Colored"; stay airay from our 
side of tovm after dark, 'caase you people 
wffi sleal ifirt if we don't watdi you, aad 
stay dear of our women. 



remea^ar, we got trees that can hold 
you." 

Sigma Phi Epsilon, you have indeed 
Ittsuked the entire black student body of 

Fhirida State University, not to meatioB the 
Mack commimity of Taflahassee. As a 
feOow GredL, 1 stand ashamed. As a Mack 
Greek, I stand applied. 1 was once wider 
the vague misoooception that only the rich, 
down-home, ^rai^t off the plantitfioa 
cnukers idolized such remnants of ^he 
past. This onfy goes to prove that old 
adage, **you learn something new every 
day." 

The diseases of apathy aad passivCTess 
only serve as tools of acceptaace for such 
krespoaslMe hehavkr as racism. As 
Florida State University's Mack students, 
we are entitled to all the benefits thereof, 
bn't It time we stood up to receive them? 
Lest Ifofget, thank you Sigma Phi ^lalon; 
it isn't everyday you get to see an 
oiganization of educated 




RUCO'S i 

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Union meets to set contract demands 



by Howard libin 



United Faculty of Florida repreaentattves firom 
tlnougliout the State UtttvmHgr System wifl meet tids 
weekend, and aie ^peeled to fdlerale their dmn»i^f^ fpf 
higher salaries and move fringe heoefUM. 

The union's contract with the Board of Regents, iHUdi 
doesn't eipire until 1979, however, allows for 
renegotiation of the fbumcial provisions each year. 

"These financial provisions indode snlaiy and fringe 
benem consideiBtkms,'' said Haiold FiBtdier, ptesideBt of 
the FSU-UFF. "At the executive council meeting they will 
attempt to prioritize the issues of this year's 
negotiatioiis." 

The 1978 contract, a product of nearly nine mondis of 
negotiations, estaMished a minimum salary structnie which 
could prove to he the focus of tins year's negotiations. 

"A salary structure was set up for professors," said Jim 
Birchfield, UFF bargaining committee member. **But they 



left out odier nwingi : of twrgaiinng udt, 
Hbnmaas, oovosdors aad iMtradors. This year we want 
to est ahlish similar rules for afl members of the bargaining 
unit." 

Biidifield said he felt the BCNt woidd be cooperative 
witli tile «doa and wmk toward making Florida 
c w n petitive witii mdimlties in otiier states. 

A report by the Cdnimiision on the Firtnre of Florida's 
PuWie Universities, sponsored by the Board of Regents, 
earlier this year found Florida's universities mediocre 
compared to other university systems and recommended 
plans to improve the system. 

"Ugfat BOW Florida's facuhy salaries are not 
competitive," BIrcMeld said. **Bot tile boanl wants 
quality education as much as we do." 

Last year the union sought a 15 percent pay h^Le. but the 
tegislature agreed to fund only a 6 percent boost. 

The union and BOR resolved the 1978 negotiations only 
after the legislature was asked to end a several month old 
deadlock over several key financial issues. 



Program finally phased out 



by susan waller 

flambeau writer 

An FSU program left Without funding 
for the past two years has officially been 
phased out with the disbanding of its 
planning committee. 

The Council for Instruction and 
Research was a part of the Instructional 
Development Center and provided mcmey 
to purdiase educational aids. 

Apimnimately $120,000 had been 
pro^d annufl% to the program unttt 
about two years ago, when a dedining 
university budget required some program 
cut. 

The program had provided eductional 
support services such as graduate 
student positions and the purchase of 
films and recordings. The committee was 
also concerned with upgrading course 
evaluations and analyzing course 
objectives. Dr. Robert M. Morgan, 



director of the council, said he hopes that 
the program will be revived in the ' *not too 
distant future." 

Money for the program had previously 
been provided by overhead or excess in 
the university budget, with some 
additional state mmiey. When the budget 
became tight several years ago, and 
these funds were depleted, the program 
had to be phased out. Up until last week, 
the council still had been meeting 
regularly, even though they had no 
money to allocate. 

Currently any excess money is being 
stockpiled, so the program may be revived 
within a few years, according to Dr. 
Robert Lawton, vice-president for 
academic affairs. 

, "It wasn't worthwhile keeping the 
committee in action at such time until 
funds are available," Lawton said of 
Morgan's decision to disband. 



Group tries to improve 
campus communications 



by Jim cox 

flambtau ttaff wrifcr 

Can FSU streamline its growing 
mreaucracy by adding yet another layer? 

An unofficial university organization is 
urrently trying to establish better 
'ommunications among the numerous 
idministrative areas on the FSU campus. 

Termed the Staff Policy Council, the 
;roup meets the first and third Tuesday of 
•very month and consists of administrators 
roro Student Affairs, the Registrar's 
•ffice, the University Attorney's office, 
he Dean of Faculty, and numerous other 
tttiversity divisions. 

* *If thm is a policy change in one area, ' * 
sidDr. P^ul Elliot, director of the Division 
•f Academic Support Systems and a 
(lember of the council, **wc try to 
omraunicmte that change across all areas 
f the campus.*' 

Qliot also said the council provides a 
lace where discussion concerning specific 
oilcies may occur in hopes of readiing 
^ sort of resohitioo which is acceptable 
i^ersity wide. Many policies now set by 



one division may not be acceptable by 
another, thus creatiag pos^kUt coofoston 
for students who have vested interests in 
numerous (Afferent divisl<ms. 

The organizatkm was fomed Uat 
summer and, according to Elliot, has 
proven effective in many other areas in its 

brief history. 

*'We've also provided a much clearer 
statement on the rights o€ students 
concefnlng the release of isfonnatloB held 
by the university," Elliot said. He also 
described, a ooundl project in the offing 
which would make dear all the rights and 
responsibilities a student has in other areas 
such as grade appeals and financial aid. 

**Many students don't even know how to 
go about appealing s grade,'* Elliot said. 
He also said the council is formulating a 
recommendation for a set university 
policy concerning community college 
students who are entering FSU and are 
often caught in a mad swirl of forms and 
administrators. The availability of some 
kind of publication resulting from this 
counca smdy is still in die plannii^ stage. 





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'Drug cmmes: pioEia aids police 



j|*l:.:..,-:.2lM!jWf naC 'i^- 

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c: : jmmm^ ^^0' m a n*^ m 

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sn "■ tstj^ it tut on^ ^r«(fi*e 
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'jxmumr o l hsmmot: 



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FbsrruL 



Monroe SL 

tfirough 

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ckma 





'Veter 



Although tomorrj 
ho|i4av for V r 

will b» 

All iMi'"' '"^ ■-^ ' ■ • 
m accordaiK f v% tth 
by federal U>*. 
weekends. 

FAMU will stavi 
Knday schcduU 
weekend. Admin ts] 
an eitra das (^ff d( 

The FSt V .innxii 
entire Union . 



First 

(UPI) — A y< 
case before the 
podknn yesterdi 

law. 



Attorney Jot 
arguing the cas| 
contest in Septc 
Biker was arrt-< 
tatosknted aft< 



InB^ 

THEMU«JMS| 
Eid Aladha prayi: 
Musiad Alawal. 15| 

A DISCUSSION 

at 7:30 in the ma 
THE STO0E > 
Religion departn 
students to discn 
today at 3:30 p.r 

FSITS SCHOOl 
quarter In non-W< 
given basic studf 
Orient (MUH 35 
4541). Taught bv 





»Easy 

•Speci< 



224 E 



Veterans' Day holiday tomorrow 



l»y iraiifWfi ttoliMi 



\ it hough tomorrow has been declared the official state 
holiday for Veteran's Day. not everything in Tallahassee 
^,11 be closed then. 

All banks will be open on Friday, but closed on Monday 
in accordance with the Federal Reserve System. It is ruled 
h> federal law, which makes Monday part of holiday 
v^cckends. 

FAMIJ will stay open on its regolar Monday through 
Fruiav schedule, with no extra day off for Veteran's 
v\c(.kcn(l Administrators set this policy to give students 
an extra day off during Thanksgiving holidays. 

The FSU campus will be a ghost town on Friday. The 
crifirc I n ion complex except the Outpost will be closed. 



The Outpofii will keep regular hours. Strozier Library wUl 
also be closed Friday, and keeping the nnusiial hours of 8 
a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday. 

AH city, county, and state offices will be closed on 
Friday. State law. which conflicts with the federal law on 
holiday weekends, declares Friday part of a holiday 
weekend w hen a celebration such as Veteran's Day falls on 
Saturday. A holiday falling on Sunday would cause 
Monday to be part of the long weekend holiday for 
workers. 

For those who have the patriotic spirit this weekend, 
there will be the annual Veteran's Day Parade downtown 
Saturday morning beginning at 11. The parade wUl begin 
at the corner of Call and Monroe Streets, and end at 

Gaines Street. 



First high court case too much for lawyer 



([ PI) — A young public defender, arguing his first 
case bt lore the Florida Supreme Court, passed out at the 
podium yesterday but recovered in time to finish his 
argument challenging the state's drunk driver homicide 
law. 

Attorney John Newton fell before the justices while 
arguing the case of Daniel Baker, who pleaded no 
contest in September 1977 to a charge of manslaughter. 
Baker was arrested in June 1977 and found to be 

intoxicated after the car he was driving cnlliHoH . . 



bicycle in Jacksonville. 

The bicyclist, Judson D. Bowden, <yed from injuries he 
received in the accident. 

An ambulance was called to assist Newton, courthouse 
personnel said, but it was immediately cancelled when it 
was apparent Newton was all right. There was no 
immediate explanation for his momentary blackout. 

Newton told the court the Florida law under which 
Baker was charged is unconstitutional because it does 
not require the state to prove the defendant's 



In Brief 



THE MUSLIM STUDENTS ASSOCIATION will hold an 
Rid Aladha prayer service tomorrow morning at 7:30 at the 
Musjad Alawal, 1530 Hudson Street. 

A DISCUSSION on the Bahai Faith will be held tonight 
at 7:30 in the main lounge conference room of the Union. 

THE STUDENT ADVISORY COMMITTEE of the 
Religion department is having a meeting for interested 
students to discuss curriculum, speakers and other items 
today at 3:30 p.m. in Room 213 Williams. 

FSU'S SCHOOL OF MUSIC will offer two courses next 
quarter in non- Western music that have recently been 
given basic studies status. The courses are: Music of the 
Orient (MUH 3571) and Music of Utin America (MUH 
4541). Taught by Dr. Olson, an ethnomusicologist, they 



meet MWF 12:20 and 1:25 p.m. respectively, in Room 226 
Music. No prior knowledge of music is necessary for the 

courses. 

THE FIRST PROGRAM of the "Speak Out Series" 
entitled "The Bakke Decision and Other Attacks on 
Minorities" will be presented today at 3:30 p.m. in Gibbs 
Park at FAMU. Dr. Ted Hemmingway from the FAMU 
History department and Askia Webb from the African 
Liberation Support Committee will speak. 



Weather 



Skies will be mostly cloudy today through Friday, with a 
slight chance of showers by tonight. Lows will be in the 
mid 50s. and highs in the low to mid 70s. The rain 
probability is 20 percent today and tonight. 




FRIDAY NIGHT 



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if 




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Justice served? 



Iiy •eymour wishman 

pacific news service 

(Seymour Wishman is a criminal lawyer In 
New York and author of a novel, ''Nothing 
PenonaJ/^ to be published by Delacorte 
thte month. A longer version of this ait|^ 
first appeared in The VUlmge Voice.) 

It was past 10 on a sweaty summer night 
when I accompanied the sister of a client to 
the emergency ward of Newark City 
Hospital. I had successfully defended her 
brother aj^ainst a mugging charge about a 
year before. Now that brother had been 
shot during an alleged burglary, and I was 
rushing to the hospital to prevent him from 
saying anything incriminating to a nurse or 
doctor — or, worse, the police. 

My client's sister and I joined the parade 
of wounded and mutilated bodies 
staggering through the swinging doors. 
Suddenly, across the lobby, a heavy-but- 
not-unattractive woman in a nurse's 
uniform shrieked, "Get that mother fucker 
out of here!" Two women rushed forward 
to restrain her. "That's the lawyer, that's 
the motherfucking lawyer!" she shouted. 

I looked around. No one else resembled a 
criminal lawyer. Still screaming, she 
dragged her two restrainers toward me. 1 
was quite baffled. As the only white face in 
a crowd of 40, 1 felt a growing sense of 
anxiety. 

•That's the son-of-a-bitch that did it to 
me!" she screamed. I didn't iuiow what 
she was talking about. 

"Kill him and that nigger Horton!" 

Larry Horton. . .of course. Larry Horton 
was a client of mine. Six months before, I 
had represented him at his trial for sodomy 
^and rape. At last I recognized the woman's 
face. She had testified as the 
"complaining" witness against Horton: 

WISHMAN: Isn't it a fact that after you 
met the defendant at a bar you asked him if 
he wanted to have a good tim^ 

LEWIS: No! That's a lie! 

WISHMAN: Isn't it true that you took 
him and his friends back to your apartment 
and had that good time? 

LEWlS:No! 

WISHMAN: And after you had that good 
time, didn't you ask for money? 

LEWIS: No such way! 

WISHMAN: You claim to hive been 
raped and sodomized. As a nurse, you 
surely have an idea of the effect of such an 
assault on a woman's body. Are you aware, 
Mrs. Lewis, the police doctor found no 
evidence of force or trauma? 

LEWIS: I don't know what the doctors 
found. . . 

I walked past the screaming nurse 
without acknowledging her and went off to 
tend to business with my burglar. 

Later that night, as I drove home from 
the hospital, 1 tried to recall all the details 
of the trial. I had done a job on the victim 
. . .alleged victim. But, of course, to be 
effective in court a criminal lawyer has to 
act forcefully — even brutally — at times. I 
had come early in my career to regard the 
"cross" as an art form. I've frequently 
discredited witnesses. Nothing personal. 
This woman simply didn't understand that. 

But this woman was upsetting me. I 
couldn't just dismiss her with jurispruden- 
tial arguments. Maybe she was one of 
many humiliated witnesses who were not 
as despicable as 1 had made them out to be. 
Maybe she was telling the truth. Maybe 
she had been raped and sodomized. And 
maybe 1 was responsible for her unjustified 
public disgrace. Worse, she may have been 



A criminal lawyer 
puts himself on trial 
and finds he's guilty 

one of many. 

1 have come to believe that my 
discomfort after this episode was not just a 
personal matter, that it also revealed 
certain occupational hazards of my 
profession. A criminal lawyer moves in a 
world filled with aggression, violence, 
incompetence and deceit. And one cost of 
the administration of justice is the damage 
done to the participants. Though surely the 
emotional and spiritual damage is worse 
for defendants — and still worse for 
victims — the lawyer can be scarred in the 
process. I've had to adjust. 

Just about every client has, at some 
point, lied to me. Several clients have 
insisted on taking lie-detector tests — until 
I've told them 1 believed the machine to be 
100 percent effective. The few clients who 
have gone ahead with the test failed. But 
while I do consider the lie detector to be 
fairly accurate. I must confess that when I 
said 1 thought the machine was "100 
percent effective," I was lying. 

And criminals are not the only liars. 
Witnesses, paid experts (such as 
psychiatrists), prosecutors — even some 
judges — lie. Many cops. 1 suspect, can no 
longer tell the difference between a lie and 
a grapefruit. 

Besides lies, I am surrounded by 
incompetence. On one side are the clients, 
each a failed rapist, burglar, murderer or 
whatever. If they had been successful, they 
wouldn't have needed me. Once a 20-year- 
old college kid came to my office to tell me 
he had succeeded in making a political 
statement — but had, unfortunately, failed 
in making that statement anonymously. 

"What was that statement?" I asked 
with some trepidation. 

"I burned down the student union 
building," he said. 

"And?" 

"I was photographed carrying a can of 
gasoline," he added sheepishly. 

Rather than fight a losing battle on some 
tenuous free-speech theory, I eventually 
worked out a deal in which my client, the 
author of the burning political statement, 
got probation. To have "walked" after 
destroying almost $1 million worth of 
property, not to mention the people he 
could have killed! The deal pleased my 
client. I was appalled. 

On the other side, the government 
manages to present an astounding array of 
professional incompetents. In one 
homicide, my client was acquitted of . 
murdering his daughter because of the 
state's bunglings. The cops illegally 
searched my client's apartment so the 
whips and blood-stained sticks were 
inadmissible. The police photographer lost 
the most gruesome close-ups of the dead 
girl, and the medical examiner who did the 
autopsy could barely speak English. And in 
the case of the nurse who'd claimed rape, it 
was possible that the doctor who found no 
evidence of force or. trauma was also 
incompetent. 

Many of my clients are monsters who 
have done monstrous things. They are 
people of bestial cruelty, without grace or 
remorse. One way to d^al with shocking 

turn to JUSnC€, fiagm 14 




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Jeff Handehan^ Mwgaret Mendel^ Ron Raphael and Debbie Kelley Ukutraie thU winter's evening tq^parel at Cantina's 



Fashions reflect increased body awareness 



r 



by julie petrella 

flambMU writvr 

For dining out, disco-ing, or a night on the town, the 
evening clothes for fall and winter this year reflect a new 
body-conscious approach to fashion, a new freedom and free 
spirit that is a direct consequence of the physical aw areness 
boom. 

The lines are narrow, streamlined, and the prime focus is 
body-based dressing. The effect is sexy and bare. 

The blousy, peasant look has seen its day, although the 
tljii^. revealing fabrics remain. The full, long skirts have 
been shaped and refined as fashions are steering away from 
the frilly, ultra-femiiMiie look to a more sleek, sensual 
approach.' 

Dresses and skirts have dramatic slits in the front and 
back and are short and narrow. The emphasis is'on legs. The 
tulip skirt of the '40»iiM ictunied with a front diagonal slit. 



Some dresses and skirts are being cut shorter in the front 
and gradually tapering down to near-aidtle length in the 
back or on the side. They are fiirdierniote dim and softly 
pleated. . . 

A variation of the timeless shirt dress, now called the 
restaurant dress, has appeared. Tailored, but s^,.witfa 
elastic waist, these dresses have side slits and sleeves that 
can be pushed up to the elbow or left at wrist length. 

The tunic has returned for evening wear, but more sheer, 
slim and elegant than its predecessors. They are now worn 
flowmg over pants. The dolman sleeve is back ag'am, but 
slightly modified for sharper and cleaner lines. Other tunics 
feature the soft looking bat-wing or raglan sleeves. 

Leg emphasis is apparent even when they're covered. 
Pants are sleek and very tapered. §everif but very feminine. 

in this year's shift in fashion trends, fabric and color are 
aiso playing an important role. Buq 



champagne are destined to be big ookm thb leaaon. And 
BOW, especiaUy at night. Mack Is hmsk. Black aloae or black 
with bUiang Chinese red, sap^ire blue, emenld green, 
turquoise and gold. The Impact of black with a flash of oolor 
is very stryriBg^and-very dramatic. The essential IMcs ate 
mainly jersey, raw silk, satin and velvet — all very fluid and 
soft and very flattering. 

The dlfectioii now is toward wearable clothes, easy to 
move in and easy to look wonderful in, strikiiig b«t sot 
overwhelming, and feminuie without being frilly. 

Wmnen are in better shape than they have ever oeen and 
dothing Is moving to aecomoMaie this fMt. The slim 'or 
streamlined look of dresses, skhts, paatsumd shiru fittiag 
which clos^ to the body or softly drape It Is tevealliii u ithout 
being overly exposing.^ and is geared to the woomui who 
takes care of her body and is aware of wttbont betas ovaily 
setf-eoBsdtes or iBrtmitfati.d by it. 



2/ 



f« ilowntef 9, 1998 AT WEEK'S END 




Hi! 



(I 



t 



1 



I 



Narrow legs and layered look are this yearns model 



r*. It, 



Sumn MoMon 

...in Two's Company clothing 



photo by Jonathan 



I 



Beautiful 



Skiers 



tea 1 1 Shop 



College 



by evelyn beck 

American designers have put style back 
into women's casual wear this winter. 
Narrow pant legs and the layered look are 
the major trends noted by fashion experts. 

**The standards are higher this year," 
said Marilyn Falciglia. manager of 
Nooveau. "Women aren't just wearing 
jeans anymore. Gothing is mc»re stylized; 
there's a turn upward in style. The blousy, 
laymd kwkhas become very popular." 

Dave Edwards of Krista Aileen notes that 
skirts are stronger this year, and that pant 
legs arc beooming increasing!)' narrower. 
He sees nMHive as the current most popular 
cdor. 

Variety is the mtm tmd perceived in 



1979 winter ftsliioBs by Sara Thonus 
desigaer-saloa manager of Rheinauers. 

**Pants run from sleek and slender to 
baggy and art off above the ankle " ^ 
said. "The dean Kne pants are as narro* 
11 inchetat the ankle, and feature one pleat 
as opposed to the two pleats in last year j 
pants." 

Fabrics are mixed, anything from silk to 
wool, and there is lots of color, she said 

Other trends evident in new fashions iit 
narrow waists, broad shoulders 
shoulder pads making a comebadL), aad 
bat-wing sleeves. Plaids and vests are big 
and designer jeans are showing up ^ 
corduroy and denim. 

"Body language." Thomas said, "isthe 
message in women's casual weartodiy->i 
look that's soft and easy." 



Junior velours. 

$1 6 to $22 

SeiiMlNNMl Mft cottM^poly 



Youl love tlui yeor's 
stySng done in a voriety, 
•f ft p fldi wyt. 



\ 



h ■ 

/ 



This 



The 
bonded collor 
tor men*** 

$12 to $16 

Choose liMS new foshkHi 

ImIi fof MMi h Mfiltr 

Stripes, or tone on tone. 
Suf SJIX S XL 



Chwieh. l»II.M«n« 224-21 
f:30 - 9:00; Sot 9:304:00; Sw 1200-5: 



yci 



Sprm\ 
are 

NFW YORK — 
jng designer of^ 
s an unusoal fas) 

mc cicellent des| 
cr casual sp«! 
ing 'summer 1^] 
jasonal New Yorl 
cks agu. 

Si/t I fits the usM 
tsthc 10 to 12s. Hi 
id the proportiot 
Tnpaldi also mi 
IS her own fabr- 
styles, each in lu 
iclude sturdy 
fhabulu ", ver> sh( 
feiftcta. 

Her jackets 
houchy. are mar 
Lpered and pocke 
k'aists. 

She takes clanul| 
kids* department 
amusingly. The\ 
Knee and have 
[rom the waist ovei 
Shorts, which 
Imporlant a^am il 
i»{K>d are Una. 
flowing and open 
[ackets with push 
ut shirts, side 
trapped dresses 
Hatching' taperrd 
affeta heath )aik 
itter, she shows 





H 

in stickpl 
StopI 
youi 



Use Our 



Ml wtfcK b tNO fhursdiiy, Novemt)er9, 1978 / 3 



S^fa Thomat 
^heinauers. 
'"d slender to 

Me as narrow ts 
bature one plett 
[s in last year's 

from silk to 
l«r, she said. 

fashioiis ate 
oulders (with 
meback), aad 
vests are big, 
ing up maile of 

[s said, ''is the 
^ear txxiay a 





ilkv 



16 

fashion 



on 
IXL 



;:30 



Spring/summer designs 
are unusual^ excellent 



NHW YORK — Marianna Tripaldi, the 
)ung designer of the house of Tripaldi, 
las an unusual fashion concept along with 
[some excellent designs. 

Her casual sportswear collection for 
[spring/summer 1979. aired as part of the 
seasonal New York fashion showings two 
L eeks ago, comes in only two sizes, 1 and 
12' 

Size 1 fits the usual sizes 6 to 8 and size 2 
'fits the 10 to 12s. However, this works well 
and the proportions are right. 

Tripaldi also mixes her own colors and 
dyes her own fabrics. She shows only 20 to 
?S styles, each in four to six colors. Fabrics 
nclude sturdy cotton, batiste, silk 
habutii", very sheer, linen and synthetic 

atfi'ta. 

Her jackets, either boxy or long and 
,li)uchy, are marvelous. The parts are 
apered and pocketed and have elasticized 

vaists. 

She takes clamdigger pants out of the 
.ids' department and updates them most 
imusingly. They are cuffed just below the 
nee and have suspender-type straps 
rom the waist over the shoulder. 

Shorts, which have become very 
m porta nt again, are well cut here. Also 
;ood are lovely little batiste dresses, 
lowing and open on the sides, belted 
ackets with push-up sleeves, excellently 
ut shirts, side-wrapped, spaghetti- 
trapped dresses, elongated silk tops over 
Hatching tapered pants, and amusing 
affeta beach jackets. To go under the 
itter,^ she shows bikinis and one-piece 



maillots. 

Two-color ranges include the seashell 
group in muted sand and eartii tones and 
the brights — very bright cUMiy yefloir, 
hot pink and vivid turquoise. 

By keeping her ooUection small, Jtiptm 
can turn out a personal desigaer eoatwe 
look. The prices match the excellent 
quality, retailiiig fraoi S44 to $150 inr Hie 
aiUu. 

John Aothony has added two lines to his 
eoHectioa this year — Pret and Petite's — 
flM^ less expensive than his couture. 

Plet hcadHnes ivonderfti] little one- and 
two-pieee dresses in sheer nun's veiling 
and abo in Nomdle, a thin wool 
jersey-type fabric. Elbow-length dolman 
sleeves with deep-rolled cuffs, tunnel 
noeis wHk self-ties and weh-seamed 
raglan sleeves ate dominant features. 

Spring coats make a comeback at 
Anthony's. They are young, chic, 
beautifully cut in styles ranging from 
welt-seamed chesterfields to coats with 
double-stitched shawl collars and tulip 
hems. 

For evening wear, dresses in stain-back 
matte jersey are clinched and belted, sides 
are slit and necklines scooped. There are 
also real suits and trouser suits in doe skin, 
flannel, covert cloth and basket weave 
wools. 

Petite's are for the five-foot and under in 
most of the styles mentioned above, in 
sizes from 2 to 14. Dresses in both lines 
range from $1.20 to $190, coats $250 to 
$300, and suits from $230 to $290 — quite a 
buy for this sort of quality! 






MiMkaions E n lw gad. 

Initial Super Status Symbols 

Her very personal initial, created in 14K gold, available 
in stickpins or pendants. Some are sparked with genuine diamonds. 
Stop by and see the entire collection, then we'll special order 
your choice just for her. (Allow 2 weeks delivery.) Collection 
pnced from $21.95 to $55. Chains extra. 
Nothin g else feels like real gold! 

Use Our Christmas Uyaway Plan. Charge Plan or Major Credit Cards. 

Carlyle & Co. 

TALLAHASSEE MALL • TALLAHAS:>EE 
Also in OfMfiriMwro. Raleigh. Macon. Kmttor. KingspoM. 

Ci^ and BHstel 




today's young fcshion pkscel 



TALLAHASSEE MALL 
PARKWAY SHOPPING CBITER 



* i 



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the fireplace stop 
where tensions ease 
and Lerner Shops 

where fashions please 
FSU majorette, eases in this outfit 



f 




CHENiLE SUPON 




COTTON SHIRT 




POLY SKIRT 




FASCINATOR SCARF 


399 


BOOT SOCKS 


2*9 





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This year, basic foundations don 'i make the grade 




o I photo by Miy tandusky 

Pretty^ lacy mmgB 

Debbie Kelley, Margaret Mendel, and Luci Mathews 
in fashions and mal<e-up by The Vogue 




ICITICRVKC 
CnORCI 



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by hcnmrd ybin 



Women to Tafitluissee are sK^piiig into sooetbiiig 
comforuUe more often, as area stores rqioft Hofcrie sales 
are better than ever. 

•*More people are dressing up these days." said Jo» 
Hughes, a buyer for Gayfer's. "So fingflrie is h ec wi ii g 
more important." 

Pretty, lacy things are the rage, replacing the bask 
foundations which accompanied the jeans of the eariy TCs. 

"There is a big change in the lingerie market.*' Hughes 
said. "There's no single hot item, people are jost baying 
pretty things with lots of lace and frills.** 

"I'm normally a conservative person,** said Jan Marset, a 
customer in the J. Byron's lingerie department, "but I go 
wild with the clothes people don't see.** 

"Teddies" are the most popular type of pajanMS today. 
Called "baby dolls" in an earlier era, "teddies** are 
thin-strapped mini-slips w ith a coullete skirt, which makes 



them comfortable to use as nightwear. 

Accofdiag to area stores, "teddies" are ^ 
Christmas gifts in the $9 to %\% rai^. ^ 

**People are ^ym^ better neiciuuMlise." Hughes v 
•*Tliey're using it more and want to get more oat of t 

Lingerie aad TbtBgs, a specialty siiop m the Ctrnage G 
shoppfag center, featnres a whole Kae of high-priced 
fortiiose who are Iboki^ for the finest in women s pn/ 

Ikriikms aad Gayfer*s is asking S80 for a Holstoo design^ 
origfaud kmiigk^ gown, featarmg elaborate embroider) a« 
lacework. 

Darker and more aeasoal oofors Itte rose and bro« n a- 
popular among foshioa-consdoiis tndhriduals. but ^ 
majority.of people still prefer more traditiooal pinks u( 
blues. 

"Every year the styles diange.** Hughes said. So n $ 
hard to say what's going to happen in the market m th( 
future.** 

"But something new will happen,** she added. 



OPEMNG 



l"NEXT DOOR 
TO 
PUBUX" 




EV THE NEW 
WESTWOOD 

SHOPPING 
CENTER 



SATURDAY NOV. 11, 1978 
FROM 10 am to 8 pm 

Register for »50.00 Gift Certificate from 10;00 to 3;00 
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE flTEMS SALE 

SPALDING TENNIS BALLS - $1S9/can 
MEN'S AND LADIES TENNIS WEAR - 25% OFF 
WILSON T-20(X) (Frame) - $34.95 
WILSON T^aOOO (Frame) - $37.95 

JERSEYS- $1.00, $3.99, $4.99 
GLOVES AND BATS - 10% OFF 

CLOSEOUT SPECIALS ON VARIOUS STYLES OF FOOTWEAR 

(Cleats, Tennis, Training) 

GOLF SHIRTS - $5.95 to $7.95 
RACQUETS ALL RACKETS - $10.00 

SPECIAL SALE PRICES ON OTHER ITEMS IN ALL DEPARTMENT' 



Male vanity strikes 



(ZNS) Us magazine reports that tiie latest Italian 
invention poised to sweep the fashion world in the U^. 
this winter is an undershirt with a girdle built into it. 

Manufactured by the Bayer Company of Milan, the shirt 
is reportedly tailored for beer-beltied tabbies wiio'd tmtfaer 
squash tMr extra inches than lose them. 

Us says that amorous males can 6mm to tMr 
skivvies without anyone kaovriiig they are wemimg the 
because it Mu like a mere nadershirt. 



And if a girdle won't hold it hi, maybe a UoMt wffl. 

A New York cosmetk smgefy ^edafist says that at 

least 3S perccttt of the people seetiBg oosBMtic sufsty ace 
men. 

Dr. CSerald Imber says that 10 to 20 yiears a^o, men 
represented a mere 10 to 20 percent of the practice. How, 
be says, "Older men are having face lifts and tibe bags 
wider thek eyes lemoved. Yoimter amd ate havhig sose 
jobs and hair transplants." 

Dr. Iniber says tiiat most men ooo^wred with women, 
"are babies wiien it comes to surgery/' wIMi iDddeatafly 
is not dieap. 

Prices nm from $3,000 to $S,000 for a M foce lift and 
eyelids, $1,500 to $3,000 for a nasal reshaping, and $20 a 
plug for a hak transplant. 





this week only! offer ends SoHirdoy, Nov. 1 1lh 

SPORTCOAT 
REBATE 

SALE! 

A CHOICE OF THE HOUSE 

FREE PAIR OF 
SLACKS . . . 

WITH EACH AND EVERY 
SPORTCOAT PURCHASED 
THIS WEEK 



details 

below! 



Choose from any sportcoot in 
stock THIS WEEK ONLY and 
recieve a free pair of slacks up to 
25% of the value of your 
sportcoot selected. For instance 
select one of our $100. coats, get 
a pair of slacks up to $25 at no 
extra charge. Sportcootrond 
blazers are big this year. Why 
not get yours now! 




NORTHWOOOMAU <1^0ll4XU| t^|aJuOfU OPEN 10 11119 Mon. iHru Set. 




I 



Sfceer iroo/ and silk interplay with coUan and linen 



bff Joanna winahip 
i i i i I II I II iiiii i iiii i 

NEW YORK — Gforia Sachs, who has always been knowo 
for her good taste and unusual combmatkMis of color tmd 
fabrics, has come up with another winning coUectioo for 
spring/ summer 1979, although many of the clothes can 
work 12 months a year as well. 

in her entry in the seasonal New York fashion showings, 
sheer woo! and silk interplay with cotton and linen, and 
colors range from black to chocolate, including beige, khaki, 
tawny apricot, vibrant turquoise, cense and white. Unusual 
prints taken from graphic book paper designs are used for 
silk separates with matching scarves. . 



Sachs shoirs skats that wrap on the side, little tops, aad 
riikts with dcta& sadi as smocldiig for the shoaidcrs. These 

can be won km for eveaSmg aad tied ia fiwat, or wrapped 
and tied on the side, rtay boz-ple^ silk darts are slashed 

open on the sides. 

Her raw silk is soft and beautifol aad she oses it for salts 
iHiich are sold as separate pieces. The jacMs w i^ eiic 
aad tailored or small, coOarless and shorter. A dioooiale 
tailored silk suit turns into a perfect eveahig look wWi oae of 
Sach's turquoise or cerise silk tops. 

For pure luxury her new suede jackets and vests, which 
are really lambskin and as soft as chiffon, aie dotted or- 
perforated and look great with linen, cotton, sik ai^ sheer 



imiqtp? designs 
in 

harcfciioocis 
precious metals & gsms 



i 



wool. Everything is small and delicate this season, indni^ 
silken cord belts with the ends decorated in ivorv 
natural wood. 

Sach*s aew sweaters, hand loomed in silk and cot^ 
both wrap and tie versions, are bound to beoome coQcciqii' 
kerns. Ditto for her treatment of cashaiere — cardigans tbt 
are longer, V-necked, and worn open or wnpped. Soae are 
tied aad drawstringed at the waist 

Aaioag the Sachs* heaaties are long cifhmctt jicket type 
carinas wora over dotted silk jaeqpiafd paats with 
matdtiag caailsoie, aad the saaie cashaiere a white 
emhroidered n befaaise a ooeil^d silk hnid uid sIkm^ 
over a aMe placed sOk skkt j|Bd eMMe or fittfe shirt 



t use 
her fi 



s,T PAUL. Mint 
[uest for beauty an< 
. on some Minnesi 
le latest imA is di i 
Ingcrnails. 

Long beautifulh 
jiails enhance toda 
sparkle on those 
Hmonsion. 
h s not \oo di 
, kly look, ever 
,1 grubbv It th.i 
|i-cgm with talst 
jrow out beneath 
A diamond hni 
jKocco Aitobcllt s 
1 1 lima. >f v^>u brinK 
anv leftover jew« 
I Otherwise, you ^ 
.iiamond for $30 fro 
iU) tor thf nii^ lant 
After Sue McL<*| 
.rntly at the 
u it phone began 
appointments 

Ihe process «n 
the nail s surfac< 
acrvlic will aiih< 
\Nhjch comes in , 
used ti) apply faK 

A generous porti' 
to the nail with a 



••X 




Js/L 



TALLAHASSEE MALL 



AOL, 




T-SHinS 

aps 

Sm M fir dl •! your school supples and 



Dazzling Disco. 
The Vogue presents the newest fashions to dance in, 
to party in, to spend the holidays in> Dresses that are 
body-bare trimmed in ihinestones-. $lide-y satin pants 
toped by tunic studded with dazzling rhinestones- 



slH)t on location at... 
Maw.TonnessMSt. 



at... ^ 4 



DowniovMn 



» SERPEN! 
» BOX 
» CABLE 
» ROPE 
» FOXTAI 
» PIAOUEI 

• All Sizes 

• All 

• Ladies 

• Mens 

No Loyowc 
Nsxl to Slu 



WEEK'S END Thursday November 9, 1978 / 7 



her 



fi 



by joanne byrne 

ST. PAUL. Minn. UPI — The eternal 
quest for beauty and adornment has zeroed 
m on some Minnesota beauty salons where 
the latest fad is diamond implants in your 
fingernails. 

Long beautifully shaped and polished 
nails enhance today's fashions, and a bit of 
sparkle on those nails adds an extra 
dimension. 

It's not too difficult to achieve the 
sparkly look, even if your nails are short 
and grubby. If that's the case you have to 
begin with false nails and let your, own 
grow out beneath them. 

A diamond implant costs $10 at the 
Rocco Altobelli salons in St. Paul and 
Edina, if you bring your own diamond from 
any leftover jewelry you're not using. 
Otherwise, you can buy a three-point 
diamond for $30 from Altobelli and pay the 
$10 for the implant. 

After Sue McLevish did five implants 
recently at the St. Paul salon, the 
telephone began ''ringing like crazy" for 
appointments. 

The process involves first roughening 
the nail's surface slightly so a layer of 
acrylic will adhere to the naO.' The acrylic, 
which comes in powder form, is the same 
used to apply false nails. 

A generous portion acrylic is applied 
to the nail with a thick brush and spcead 



around. Then the diamond is pressed close 
to the base of the nail and more acrylic is 
applied over the nail and the diamond. 

After the fingernail dries, a buffmg disc 
and emery board are used to file the acrylic 
off the diamond and smooth the rest of the 
nail. 

No other gem can be used for the 
implant because other stones are too soft. 

The whole process takes about ten 
minutes and can last from a month to ten 
weeks. Customers claim the diamond 
fingernails remain in good shape after an 
afternoon of tennis or a round oi dish 
washing. 

As the fingernail grows, the area of new 
growth must be filled in with acrylic. This 
can be done in the salon or at home with a 
do-it-yourself kit you can purchase. 

Most women have the diamonds 
implanted on the right hand, McLevish 
said, since an engagement ring is 
traditionally worn on the left hand and the 
implant will achieve *'a balanced twinkle'* 
on both hands. 

While glittering nails are big in the 
Midwest, McLevish said 14-karat gold 
fingernails are the popular item in 
California. But at the price of gold, she 
said, she doesn't expect any demand in the 
Minneapolis-St. Paul area. 

Besides, as the old story goes, it isn't 
gold, it's diamonds that are a girl's best 
friend. 



SERPENTINE 
BOX 
CABLE 

ROPE 
FOX TAIL 
PLAQUE 
All Sfans 
All Lengths 
Ladies 

NoLoyoway 386-2282 
Next to Skaggs ARMrtsons 



One day only! 

Soturday 

Nov. 11 
I0AM-6PM 

AGAIN 
DUE TO 
POPULAR 
DEMAND 



The Peace Corps 

Ifou can be fntxid of it. ¥xi can be part of it. 
For infiirmation, call 644-3241 
or come by room 417, Sandek, FSL 





r 



Accessories turn toward the tacky 



For accessories, clumps of junk jewcify fit the 1940-50isli 
look. Largerfeld winds long beads around his giris. 
Sherrer's Rita Hayworth satin gowns are supported by 
dumps of bird feathers or rhinestudded seashells. Saint 
Laurent uses seashell necklaces and wide plastic bracelets. 

Shoes have skyscraper high heels and often are 
fire-engine red or multi-colored plastic. Pink and purple 
stockings abound and Dior brings back fishnet hose Ja n 
dozen delicious colors. 

Lacquered, straw, pancake hats or tiny pillboxes drip 
with veils and flowers hang over upswept hairdos of three 
decades ago. Saint Laurent copys the American sailor hat 
to match his red, white and blue sailor look. Chloe shows 
fans printed to match silk toies vtaMrt with 
Matisse-like designs. 

The new look means the comeback of the afternoon 
dress, not popular for decades. Givenchy, Guy Laioche 
and other houses show printed, silk * 'luncheon diesses" 
with 1940ish short, puffed sleeves, belts and nafrow 
lapels. 

Many of the silk prints are amusing: robot men and 
space mobiles at Chloe , ladybug pants with matching 
belts and ear clips at Givenchy, astrologer crescent moons 
and stars at Saint Laurent. 

The sexy look extends even to swim suits. Bikinis look 
like lacy black underwear at Givenchy and Ungaro. Saint 
. Laurent shows a wow of a shiny bladt swim ^it with one 
shoulder strap. Designer Chantal Thgmass' swim . suits 
are cut thigh to show the leg dear to the hipbone. 

Who will wear all this? S<Mne members of the audiences 
at last week's shows groaned that the "retro" 1940-50 look 
and sailor outfits were hardly original. 

But the "with it" hourglass shapes of Chloe and the 
football shoulders of Claude Montana probalrfy wiO deli^ 
anybody under 35 who was not wearmg them 30 years a^. 
Even the most conservative woman will find that the 
fashions of Givenchy, Valentino, Samt Laurent and Dior 
are still elegant and sophisticated even tf they are more 
narrow and a bit shorter with waists and shoulders 
definitely marked. 



Already at fashion shows, Italian and French buyers and 
fashion writers were turning up wearing themselves the 
high heeled red shoes, big plastic hair bows, 1940 hats, 
etc. 



LET'S WORK TOGETHER TO PpOTcr- 
THE UNBORN AND THE ♦ 




Susan Monson 

deliciously devoid of the tacky in chthes pmvkM by 
Two's Company 



ADRIAN OUTL 



4t 



GRAND OPENIN 



COMC BY TO R 



Is 
2n 



Soft dresses 
for after dork wMi 
a fosdncrting look oN fhdr own. 
The/N moke every occasion special! 



rize $ 
Vize $ 




00 in merchandise 
00 in merchandise 



3rd Prize $50 in merch 




Men s Cotton/Blend Shirts $7 
> Name Brand Cowlneck Sweaters 
Al! colors 50% off Now $6°" 

^ ///S^y yf,, //^V,.^ 



C 



Look for WGLF Remote Va 
' (bat. Nov. I T 12:00-4:00 



1 



of Bridal and 3^ 

906 N MONROE 



\i Ninety 

224-0487 



Westwood Shopping Center 



Pensacola 



ATWEBTSBIO 



/§ 



Formals are more 
casual and natural 



ipyricfetoM 

Modest colofB, softer, mm mtaai materimls. and an 
increased tieiid toward the "casul Idek" highlight this 
wtoter's forecast for tiie men's luhioii aeene. 

Navy bhie, and a variety of browns, tans, and grays will 
dominate business attire this whrter along with the 
continiianoe of Ac aostere, conservative pinstripe and the 
introduction, once again, of tweeds. 

"Bbow patches are also making a comeback this winter 
and ties are going to get narrower, perhaps as much as an 
ch," said Bruce Hinson of Hinson's Inc. 
Lapels are going to be considerably thinner and jackets 
will be shorter with less padding in the shoulders. This 
effect will enhance a less confined, more contoured, 
natural appearance. 

Designers are also turning to natural fibers and 
combinations. Wool, cotton and mixes of one or the other 
with polyester will be quite prevalent. 

New manufacturing techniques have made wool and 
cotton much softer and easier to take care of. One hundred 
percent cotton permanent press products have been 
introduced for the first time and new methods in wool 
refining and weaving have made it softer, promoting a 
return to natural fibers. Consumers, as a result, can expect 
to pay more money for the new, improved product. 

"The conversion to the cool, natural fibers is welcome," 
according to Larry Sassano of Diamond's Men's Shop. 
The Southeast likes these fibers.** 
Sassano, just back from a buying trip in Europe, pointed 
out that even formal wear will now convert more readily to 
casual wear. "Designers are displaying more versatility,'* 
he saici. 

New this winter will be the leisure jacket with matching 
V nt'ck sweater-vest and baggy trousers. It will be worn 
predominantly for business occasions, but it is casual 
enough when worn with an open collar to double as 
evening attire. Practicality is evidently becoming more and 
more important to the designers. 

Tuxedo styles will basically remain unaltered. There will 
be a return to velvets, and the V-vest should replace the 
scoop-vest. Shorter lapels will also make an appearance. 
Last year's favorite color, burgundy, will be less in 
demand this year as browns are fast becoming the new 
favorite. As for major changes, well, expect few. 

Pauline Allen of the Florida Tux Shop summed it up by 
saying. "Designers have changed tuxes so often they no 
longer have any significant changes to make." 




t ormal wear jor tti^n m 
more carnal ihh year m 

9kamn by Ron Rmfhmd amd 

Jeff Hondelsman^ 
accompanied by Margarei 
Mendml and JMMm K^ley^ 
in foMona by Thm Vogum at 
Caniina^B 



SINCE 1924 



V 



, iWli 

'II 



fl 



t 





e 






"33 



Rm. 314 University Union 
644-5744 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Let ys iles^gii.. 



Resumes 

Invitations 

Posters 

Business Cards 

Fliers 

Booklets 



Menus 

Brochures 

Pamphlets 

Newsletters 

Books 

Bulletins 




Rich brown velveteen blazer & skirt is accented 
with a cream colored, lace-trinuned blouse 
for that classic look for all occasions. 



r 



NORTHWOOO MAU 





r 




Drape donH shape 




The constncting. overiy stylized fashions of last 
are at last gone. HiankfuUy, Acre's a comfortable look in 
irinter sportswear this yev for males, a kiose fouiig, 
casual iook 

•1 he big rage m 4n^, mit ^kmpt says Doug Wheeler 
of DC Wheeler's laeii's ciothing. Accorc : ^ o Wheeler, 
the Italian layered look, consisting of silks iinens and 
^eated pants, will edipse tht current trend of Frewii 
tidiiily tapered wiater fa&hion. 




Produc<»d Lou 



^"i me Is 
uimin 

Ou 



SGvTing Ch e ech Mam and To"- '"He 
torn Skerrie Edip Adams Strciirie: Hartin 
KSgt Stedenko Wnmer t>i Tommi Cho»w & I r»*^: - Manr 
& Lou In m iaaroo Direaed k^ Loij ^dier Panawiuon^ 





C 


INEMA 2 

N ^HEATRE 






1 



« May 200 4M feK tM 





Where'» iha 

. . .^nT\^ 

Scent 



It can't be hung in 
but fragrance in fasi 
important over tht p; 
now incorporating > ( 
than as a thing in its< 

Fragrance has evoi^ 
fashions to create anl 
Fragrance is nou cho 
image on an individu; 

Naturally, the sfi 
distinctive and allunnj 
tragrance is hcavv 
jasmine, violet and tol 
and spicy his vear ai 

The lower-priced, 
tragrances seem to 
distinctive designer li 
are expensive, but ind| 
prices, women arc hi 

In the past few yeai 
their exclusive lines 
heavy money maker 
men's and women's 
out almi>st as bountifi 

The forerunners so 
St. Laureni; Cie. Cinnj 
Lauren by Ralph Laur| 
PacoRabanneand Hal 
ag the largest seller i 

As dressing is Secoi 
^ith individualifs and 
^Ic of fragranct folUn 
a<Tr55nry lias 
^ fashHin. 




AT V^raCSBIO Tliuradiiy,NoMiili8r«,l078 / 11 




pIlOlB ttf 



Where^B my Opium? 

...in Two ConyMny dothing Susan Monson searches for her scent 



Scent makes sense 



by Juito p«tntlla 



It can't be hung in a closet, folded, ironed, or even seen, 
but fragrance in fashion has become dramatically more 
important over the past few years. Men and women are 
now incorporating scent as more of a part of the wardrobe 
than as a thing in itself . 

Fragrance has evolved along the same lines as designer 
fashions to create an aura of individuality and elitism. 
Fragrance is now chosen to complete a well-put-togethcr 
image on an individual's entke wardrobe. 

Naturally, the stronger tiie fragrance, the more 
distinctive and alluring it will be, and the new atttti^ of 
fragrance is heavy and aromatic. Stressing cinnamon , 
jismine, violet and tobac bases, the new perfumes arc rich 
and spicy this year and reflect an almost oriental mood. 

The lower-priced, mass-marketed and lightly scented 
fragrances seem to be giving way to a wave of heavy, 
distinctive designer lines. The new designer fragrances 
are expensive, but individual, and regardless of the higher 
prices, women are buying them. 

In the past few years, the designers started introducing 
their exclusive lines of perfume. Last year was a very 
heavy money maker with about 33 fairly successftri new 
men's and women's fragrances, and this year is turning 
out almost as bountiful. 

The forerunners so far this season are: Opium by Yves 
St. Laurent; Cie. Cinnabar, and Celadon by Estee Lauder; 
Lauren by Ralph Lauren; Cardin; Bill Blass; Calandre by 
PacoRabannc and Halston. Youth Dew still remains on top 
as the largest seller in the country. 

As dressing is becoming more of a personal statement, 
^ith individuality and awareness as the prime focus, the 
fole of fragrance follows suit. The invisible, but alluring, 
"•^''wy has briiiMM^ an essential part of the total altitude 




MAKb 

CHRISTMAS 
A LITTLE 
WARMER 
THIS yEAR 



odidas^ 



This Chffstmas. matothings a little 

warmer for that favorite jogger of yours 
with great looking warm-up suits 
from Athletic Attic. 

Select from a wide variety of styles 
and colors all priced to stay well within 
that Christmas budget! And rememl>er. 
at Athletic Attic, there's always 
jwmeone handy who has the 
professional experience necessary to 
help you malte the best 4^4^^ # 
selection possible. I 

This Christmas give 
the gift of active living. 
Visit Athletic Attic today! 



Tallahassee Mall 
386-2606 





J.De's SPECIAL - Shampoo, 
Conditioner, and any style 
haircut — Just 

HENNA SPECIAL - Every Monday only $1 1 .95 

100% Natural Organic Persian 

Henna — includes Shampoo 
and Reconditioning treatment. 

Open 9-8 M-^ 

9-5 Srt. 
222-1112 




Sorry Wedo NOTteofe 



I 



I 



■I 



IP J 



uncontrolable urge moves Devo^s music 



by stmm rouM 



Qi ibe W« Nii MM? As W« Am MITOI, BM| 



Devo is one of the moit waiqae bmik Id 
IIk New Wave. Even ii a coflcction of — c M y catio aai 
Mtiri ani, Oidr Miam oo-sliige aad on-viBsrl acti¥ttbs 

Devo, in the nidst of Hm robot-^ peffonnaaces tluit 
are their frademarfc, mrrtumkaBy peds off 
juBpnits to conplde tiie Am k 
ttaaped;"Dovo." They have, at tinea, dmaed in ovtfits 
tiUrt leaenhle hoge plutic gaihage bags, witfi stocking 
■wsks as a c e cas ot fea . Aad tfwk siagles to date are no 
BMxe Bornal* 

The qnestioii beoooMS, can Devo soccessfiilly doplicate 
Its mmmai and chaotic attitiides and music on a 
hMmgOk aftmf Aad, thankfully, the anwer is yes. 

Qt An Wa Not Hsu? As We Aro DEVO is no 
disappointflwat. The songs in this album have the quick 
pnndi and taw poarer that epitomizes New Wave and 
puik. They are fut and to the point. Lyrics are spit out, 
the music surges o«t witfi an anoootroOable quality. And 
there is the imiqiie robbery bounce and chugging sound 
that Devo has made its own. 



Devo's upside-down view of the worM permeates the 
album. Nasty irony abounds. From "Space Junk" to 
**Prayhig Hands/' Devo refuses to give points to the 
nMinstKaas view of reality. And their attitudes are both 
eerie and gennindy fanny. 




Devo is short for De>Evofartioe Band, a stance 
apm"JocfcoHoi 



ft 



I say it*8 al 
Just whidfai 



we're 



are we net bmu? 
we are DEVO! 
are we not men? 

D-E-V-0! 

But De-Evolution Band, in addition to being 
"pinheads," are polished rock musicians. The heartbeat 



like bass that begins the masterpiece "m, 
creates tension and excitement throughout a?"^ 
There is a continuity on Q: Are Wc Nat MmTfJ^ 
DEVO! And this continuity never degenerates 
repetition. The hard drive and tension aJwiy, t|?J 
Devo's previously released singles have bees 
slightly for the album, but they are noleiseicit 
Devo plays with the banal and uneipected is bL^' 
play with time in the music itself. "Satisfectioa'*sr ^ 
if it is slippiflig on the tumtaMe, "Shriveled4Jp' ii, 
steadUy. ^ 

Nothing on tlus albom is styted. Devo's 
constantly threatens to break into the chaooc^l 
nnoontroDed. "Gnt Ftdktg" is an inomtatioa. Bm rl\ 

ten a chant to hold back chaoa and the uakaon. itM 
for and prec^itatea chaos. TMs is really aa lacMinfci 

fia€ as Hga ga( a 
aMilfa a«t 

nrge 

The music breaks kwae. Words are flung out and e«{ 
instnunent has a mind of its own. This retlly a i 
uncontrolable urge. 



Northwood 




limberiane Shops 



SALE - Nylon-tricot running sliorts 



re9. 9.9S 



Nmt 6.95 



WARM-UPS - RAQUETBAU 
SPEEDO-SWIMWEAR 

Shoes for otf sports 



ACVHdr 
Products 



HAIRCUnERS INC 

GRAND OPENING SPECIAL 
Perms Np- 35" Now 25^ 

Henna R^- ^ Now 15"^ 

nUHl DiC let I97t 

I HsircMti Sr^' WALK-INS WElSmi 



Mon.-Frl. 9 a.m. — 8 p.m. 
Saturday 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. 



next to 



SPORTS 
WEAR 

clearance 



Lucky you! Make your 
Fall clothing buy 
NOW 
and take advantage of 
mtr gnat vaiues 



30% 



0 OFF 



our sportswear collection 

ittekides aU the favorite 
styles from: 

. . . Jones of New York 
. . Courtney Brook 
■ ■ John Meyer 

. . . Modern Jrs. 
' Potty Woodmtrd 



DOWNTOWN 
TALLAHASSEE MALL 
Vin - Nk's Charge - MasteiChvp 
Charge Accounts Invited 




Greek 



screeclita^ 

f$ stadium won't 

ftecn «*<;>rorttiei 
^n- of their dimce 
•s fif«t-evef P«' 

race Scheduled u 
-r follows a parad'.- 
ipbcll Stadium ! 
ff >ur women truni caj 



,dams Street 
ipanv and D.C V\ 
H-nefit lor the leM 
i^ht in the Hu 
lahasstc Hilton 
he event gets ui. 



WE'R 




Ameri 



SEE I 

Fl 



A J 

one of 

collectii 
you'll fii 
personal 




C 1978 Hallmarw' 



Talla 



mm 



1 II 



, ■ 1 I'^i. 

Creek bedlam on campus? 



jcrccching tires and squeaking 
rings you hear tomorrow afternoon at the 
stadium won't be from the normal 
d of students leaving for home. 
(Sixteen sororities and the "mattresf 
^•n" of their choice will be competing in 
li s first-ever Panhellenic Association 
cd race. Scheduled to start at 1 p.m., the 
^ fbflows a parade from the main gate to 
impbeU Stadium. The teams will consist 
^ four women from each sorority, who will 



push the beds aroond die course, and a 
titth member, the mattress man. wlio wttl 
be dressed in pajamas and tucked neatly 

into bed. 

The wmners of the race wffl receive a 
trophy, and att the proceeib btm the race, 
approximately $1,600. win be donated to 
the Muscular Dystrophy Association. 
Following die bed nm, thm will be a fidr 
with game and food booths. A bluegrass 
band will also give a free cmicert at 3 p.m. 



Fashion show benefits arts 



Adams Street Exchange, Two's 
fflpany and D.C. Wheelers will sponsor 
enefit for the LeMoyne Art Foundation 
ight in the Big Bend room of the 

thassee Hilton. 

t he event gets underway at 6 with a 



cocktail party with a clothing and hair 
fashion show starting at 7:50. The show 
will last until 10. 

Tickets for the benefit are $4 and are 
available at D.C. Wheelers and Adams 
Street Exchange. 



WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR UFE 







American Heart Association cf} 



SEE US FOR CUSTOM IMPRINTIN 
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Tallahassee -iMfiwA^L Shop 

■1 TallohossM AAoil 



^517 airs student show 



rV 



Timty students are involved, wmm for 
DIS credit, in Tallahassee's own Wall 
Street Week-type program called Business 
Review. wMch #91 air on Pnme Finie. 
Friday at 7:30 p.m. oo WFSU-TV. 

Business Review, produced by the FSU 
School of Business kk ooiQunction with 
WFSU-TV. will focus on local and 
statewide businesses and bring natkmal 
issues — inflation, the economy, f tTftfiftf i 
— to local relevance. 

As Steven Selec. finance professor and 
faculty sponsor, said. * 'Business Review is 



to inform TaOiliassee about a Florida Slodt 
Market, or about local Mbtioii, or 
Tallahassee unempio> mc«|," 

Business Review. cMilg off a 
successful sumoKroo public cable TV. wiii 
be a regular iS-minute portion of Prime 
Time. F ridajj^ja ght's program will be on 
bad cbedMHl will feature State Attorney 
Harry Morrison and the manager ot I'ublix. 
Bill Curry. 

The hope is that the program will 
become a regular 30-minute progrm 
starting in January. Local business support 
has been strong. 



• 

I 



The 
Layered 

Look 



Mr 



'I 



ti.» 
1^' I 



*• 1 . 

Jil 



Hey Girl! If you're looking for the fashion, 
If you're looking for the style. 
Colony Shop for a while. 

NORTHWOOD MALL & TALLAHASSEE BIALL 

Colonv Models: Vickie Pullen & Helen Stic^ 



If 



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» 




14 f Thursday Novf^'^ber 9, 1978 atwcpw^'c c^m 




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111 



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l»y Steve dollar 



- - ■ — — 

sran wriMr 

Bpeeial eventg 

Rowdy Seminoles can get ma etiy sUut 

on Homecoming tomorrow night at 8:30 in 
the south end of Campbell Stadium at a 
pre- Homecoming pep rally and bonfire 
sponsored by the Scalp Hunters. The 
gathering will feature 25 cent draft beer 
and several special guests, including FSU 
President Bernard Sliger; former Seminole 
head football coach Bill Peterson; Sol 
Carroll, FSU's number one fan; the FSU 
Ptep Band and FSU cheerleaders. Special 
awards will be given to men's and women's 
gfoaps showing the most spirit at the rally. 
In addition, the group bringing the most 
firewood between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. will 
receive a free keg of beer. It's guaranteed 
to be colder than a well-digger's ass, so be 
sure to drag a log along. 
^ The banks of the Suwannee River will be 
the location for a reception to open a 
two-month long "Cousin Thelma Show," 
sponsored by the Stephen Foster Center 
Sunday from 3-5 p.m., in the auditorium of 
the administration building. The show will 

feature memorabilia on Miss Thelma Ann 
Boltin's long-time association with the 
preservation and collection of Florida 
folklore. Miss Thelma, as she is called, has 
been actively involved in the field of 
folklore for over 50 years. 

Those with latent bat tendencies should 
check out an LPO sponsored cavern trip 
and picnic to the Marianna caverns 
Saturday. Those interested should meet at 
the Union Pool parking lot 7:30 Saturday 
morning and have a $6 registration fee 
handy to cover park entrance and 
transportation. Participants will have to 
provide their own sack lunches however. 
Everyone should be back by 4:30 p.m., in 
plenty of time for the football game, 
according to LPO. 

LPO is also sponsoring an Autumn 
Crafts Fair Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 
in the Union Courtyard. All big-bend area 
craftspeople are invited to participate. Any 
kind of hand-made art or craft is 
acceptable. Registration is $2 for FSU 
students and $4 for non-students. For more 
information call LPO at 644-6710. 

United Ministries Center Is sponsoring 
an international gifts sale today through 
Saturday at their 548 W. Park Avenue 
location across from Bill's BooltsU>re. All 
items are hand-crafted by people in 
developing nations around the world. The 
sale will begin each day at 10 a.m. 

Students interested in playing in an LPO- 
sponsored college bowl tournament 

Monday should register at Room 238 UAMtt 

before then. 

In the arts, the FSU School of Music 
Recital Series continues Sunday night with 
the Percussion Ensemble performing at 
8:15 in the Opperman Music Hall. 

Meanwhile the Mainstage Theatre 
production of "Count Dracula" closes out 
this weekend with performances running 
tonight through Saturday at 8:15 p.m. oo 
the Mainstage in the Fine Arts Building. 
There will also be a matinee Saturday at 2 
p.m. Admission for students is $2.50 
weeknights, $3 on weekends, while general 
admission is $3 weeknights and S3.50 oe 
the weekend. 



Two Tallahassee artists condnae their 
display ai me LeMoyne Art Foundation, 
125 N. Gadsden Street through the 
weekend. Painter Nancy Reid Gunn and 
figurative sculptor Ralph Hurst will have 
their works on view from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 
today through Saturday, and 2-5 on 
Sunday. 

Auditions for the Tallahassee Little 
Theater production of "The Decline of the 
Entire World as Seen Through the Eyes of 
Cole Porter " will begin Sunday at 2:30 
p.m. at the Theater on the comer of 
Thomasville and Betton Roads. Singers, 
comedians and dancers are especially 
welcome. 

Elmodine, who was bom in the 

Flambeau classifieds 22 years ago this 
week, welcomes all tube steak fans to her 
birthday party Saturday just north of 
Bannerman Road off Thomasville Road. 
**Just head on out and listen for some 
hoopin' and hollerin' and that'll be it," 
Elmodine says. Revelers are asked to bring 
their own white sauce as cmly beer and 
oysters will be provided. 

mime 

Rock and rollers can boogie tonight 

through Saturday night at Tommy's Deep 
South Music Hall with local boys Spice who 
have added a bit more blues to their music 
of late. 

Jazz lovers can hear ever-reliable local 
favorites Lohman-Mello and the Sound 
Affair at the Sub and Pub downtown and 
Ricco's Lounge respectively. Lohman- 
Mello play tonight through Saturday while 
Sound Affair begin their stint Friday night. 

Acoustic spirits have three choices this 
weekend wilji Veraoii Hall playing at 



Cl> des: Robin and Russ Ffydeirixirf it the 
Alley and Del Suggs and Jack Nidiob at 
the Capitol Inn. Both Hall and the 
Frydenborgs play tonight through 
Saturday. Suggs and Nichols play tonight 
and Friday only. 

Last, but not least. Tom Waits will not 
perform at the Pastime Downstairs Bottle 
Club tomorrow and Saturday night, the 
Labamba Brothers will however, starting at 
11 p.m. and going until 5 a.m. The Pastime 
won't be selling beer, wine or spirits so 
you'll have to bring your own. 



Moore Auditorium: Friday: "Rocky," 
7:30, 9:45 and midnight. $1.50. Saturday: 
Stooges. Bloopers and Poops/' 9:30. 

11:30. $1. 



Tonight: "Cheap I 
Friday tluough Sunday. gLT?^ 
99 cents. ^ 
Mbrib **Bom Again ' 
T aHahataee Mall Cinemag. i c. 
WHch Mountain • and Reiurnr?' 
Mountain." II: *lp in Smoke ^ 
Capital Drive-la: Corvette s.^^ 
and-F.LS.T" 

Varalty Triple: ins.de W 
Welles." • Midnight Expnu^ 
"Interiors." i, 

Miracle Triple; Tonight: -Anniefc: 
••Goodbye Girl" and •Qh God 
"Death on the Nile." Weekend: "cj! 
Horseman." "Death on the Nile " 

Capitol Cinemas: "Sound of 
••Animal House," "Grease." aul tl 
Big Fix." 






Voic' 
mak 



by danni v< 

'i'm Jo Mk h.n 

(WGLF FM) thr; 

,WOWD FM) 1 
the time at WFSl t| 
went bv Jt>. and th. 
a lot of people arom 
got to knou ni 
cnjoved that a lot 

So says Jo 
producer of the 
Public Radio Ncfu 
goes on the air ai 
Tallahassee's 
stations when 
keeping an eye > 
government. 

She's leaving 
see in a week to ta^ 
in Washington, 
news director for 
Public Radio, 
bdttod work and fn 
a spot close to the 
nerve center. 

"(Working coi 
stations) was a re.^ 
part of announcing 
people would call \ 
they lilted your mui 
they wanted t 
something special 
can talk to differed 
with different back 
who like different t 
nmsic. and that'.s 
exdtiiig. 

••Aad that k 
separatea my two 
atitiea — the 
personality from ti 
amMMMcer. Most 
friends call me evei 
don't know Fm doi; 
soon as they tunc 
hem' me they call 
say. *0h tyre. Jo M 
we know it's you.' B| 
with the people wh< 
know — and th< 
andienoe isn't nei 
the tame people w 
listening to me wh* 
<ioing claaaical mu 
can get away with 
degree. Bot dose 
and people that Tvt 
tn contact wtth know| 
During the legi 
seaaion, Jo has a hai 
Aom, Capitol Repoi 
night which forces 

P«t in intense 15-h< 
for a OMmth or two. 
her what she does to 
tmaion. and was sui 
hy the aathre New Y< 



'*!*« an addkt f< 
TV. Just give roe ar 
of aitnatioo oonied> 
^^pftB jnst so I 
mindleaa for a whil 
<^«e home and tut' 



I 



Detecti^ 



in 



ind ••B-J* ^'P^fe 



* 'Corvette 



« « 



teht Express. 



/njght: -Annie Han 
|n<J '-Oh God. ' 

Weekend: "Come., 
on the Nile." 
"Sound of Music 
"Grease/* and Tin 




odd 





AT WEEK'S Old Thuradiy, NoMnitarft. 1078 / 16 




Privait -^-i^es 




Voice of Tallahassee 
makes move to D.C. 



by dsfiffil vogt 



• 1 m Jo Michaels at Gutf 
(WGLF-FM). then at the D 
(WOWD-FM) and most of 
the rime at WFSU-FMIjust 
went by Jo, and that's what 
a lot of people around town 
got to know me as. 1 
enjoyed that a lot." 

So says Jo Miglino, 
producer of the Florida 
Public Radio Network, who 
goes on the air at some of 
Tallahassee's commercial 
stations when she's not 
keeping an eye on state 
government. 

She's leaving Tallahas- 
see in a week to take a job 
in Washington, D.C. as 
news director for National 
Public Radio, leaving 
behind work and friends for 
a spot close to the national 
nerve center. 

(Working commercial 
stations) was a really good 
part of announcing because 
people would call you up if 
they liked your music or if 
they wanted to hear 
something special. So you 
can talk to different people 
with different backgrounds 
who like different things in 
music, and that's always 

exciting. 

"And that kind of 
separates my two person- 
alities — the news 
personality from the rock 
announcer. Most of my 
tnends call me even if they 
don t know I'm doing it. As 
soon as they tune in and 
hear me they call up and 
say. 'Oh sure, Jo Michaels, 
we know it's you.' But still, 
with the people who don't 
know — and the Gulf 
audience isn't necessarily 
the same people who were 
listening to me when 1 was 
doing classical music — I 
can get away with it to a 
degree. But close friei^ 
and people that I've come 
in contact with know." 

During the legislative 
session. Jo has a half-hour 
*»b(nv . Capitol Report, every 
night which forces her to 
put in intense 15-hour days 
tor a month or two. I naked 
her what she does to relieve 
tension, and was surprised 
hy the native New Yorker's 
answer. 

"I'ni an addict for junk 
TV. Just give me any kind 

situation comedy or soap 
opera just so I can be 
mindless for a while. I just 
<^n^ home and turn on tiie 




having to worry ahout a 
sound man. a cameraman, 
some bod V domg lights. 

■'I really like that control 
a lot more. My mother 
keeps telling me there s 
more money in TV. hut 1 
don't think I'd ever get into 
TV 

Jo graduated from FSU 
in 1975 in mass communi- 
cations before yetting a job 



at WFSL-FM doing a 
classical music show (she 
landed the lob because she 
could pronounce the names 
of classical composers). 

She worked her wav up 
through the ranks to 
become head of Florida 
Public Radio, only to move 
on to bigger things. 

When she moves to DC. 
she may leave her fnends 



behind, but not her 
convictions. 

"1 like being with people 
I'm comfortable with and 
closest with and that 1 lo\e. 
1 don't want much mone\ or 
fame or anvthing like that 
out of a career. 1 think that 
if I'm just satisfied with 
what I m doing, that's the 
most important thmg to 
me. 



urve- 



eta 



photo t>y Miy undiMky 



Jo Miglino 

. . . she'll tell you anything you want to know about 
slick st9te poUtkians between puffs on a Marlboro 

and bites of a Wendyburger 



TV and vegetate, that s<h^ 
of thing." 

Fledgling journalists 
aren't that way for the 
money because most begin- 
ning jobs just don't pay 
much. Usually it's no more 
than the satisfaction of 
seeing the truth go out over 
the communications chan- 
nels that keeps a reporter 
going, and Jo is no 
exception. 

"That's public radio — 
there's not a whole lot of 
money in the future, but it 
balances out because you 
get to do so many different 
things and you have so 
much creativity to work 
with. AU the people 1 work 
with are wonderful because 
they're not in it for the 
money, they're in it for a 
reason, and that makes it 
worthwhile. You can't get 
rich doing public radio, 
that's for sure. 

**My famUy keeps want- 
ing me to go into TV, but I 
don't because I like radio — 
I tik« being forced to be 
creative without having 

visuals. 

•And Hike the fact that 1 

go out and do 

everything myself. 1 can go 

out and get the interview . 

bring it back to the studio. 

cut it up the way I want to. 

write the script, then get on 

and annoiuiGe A 



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1223 W. Thorpe St. (Next to Big Ben Ber-* "-itols) 385-6476 



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TALLAHASSEE MALL • TALLAHASSEE 
Also In QfMnaboro, Raleigh. Macon. Kinaton. Kin^poit. 
Panama dty and Bfialol 




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Ihrys, Nov, 9 - Ponhellenic RmwoI at National Guard Armory; 

Featuring ELI. 

Fri. Nov. 10 - OM FashkNied Fair and Bod Roce for 

MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY ilSSOClATIQN 

12:00 Bod Porado starts at Westcott 
1:00 - Bed Race starts at Campbell Stadium 

Aisfi: 25c Booth Games 
Schitz beer, 25c a cup • 
2:00 - AB you con eat Picnic - $3.25 each 

catered by SAGA 
3:00 - Huegross bond - 'HtAINBOW" 

Sat. Nov. 11 - Turnabout FootbaH Game PreGame Activities - 

All Greek Happy Hour at Byrons 3-6 pan. 

Drinks 50c 




Our Pantry (M 
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Hit 



Justice 



from pags 12 



behavior is to create a sepmrating distance. 

But at some deeper level, regardless d 
how detached one feels, there is a 
psychological cost of each slice of 
courtroom life for the criminal lawyer too 
long in the business. 

Destroying witnesses can lead to an 
arrogance and an inflated sense of control 
over people that is. at times, difficult to 
leave behind in the courtroom. 

Even more dismaying, the need to 
function dispassionately has widened the 
distance between my natural emotions and 
intellectual reactions. In the murder case 
where my client was charged with 
murdering his daughter, I constantly 
resisted calling the two-year-old victim 
"it** in front of the jury, but "it" was 
usually what 1 thought. This detachment is 
exacerbated when — as my outrage over 
that "prostitute," Mrs. Lewis, slandering 
the good name of my client by claiming 
rape — the lawyer conjures up emotions in 
an effort to influence the jury. These 
contrived emotions are nothing less than 
deceitful performances. When too many 
such performances are successful, 
emotions in other contexts become 



Part of the praMen is Hiat the trial itaeir 

is ritualized afgresrion. The ohfect oC the 
contest is noT '*a seaich for truth/' it's 
rimply a struggle for victory. Fighting as 
vigorously as possiUe to whi for mie's 
client is in the highest tradition of the 
profession. The less worthy the client, the 
more noble the effort. 

I see myself, finally, as having chosen to 
be an essential part oi an arbitrary, 
frequently racist and often brutal process. 
Many defendants are convicted for acts 
made inevitable by poverty. When such a 
client of mine goes to jail. I am despondent 
not only for having personally failed in 
beating "the system," but for having, in 
effect, been party to a savage conspiracy of 
a society that has failed. The courts were 
never intended to discipline, and they are 
by no means capable of regulating such a 
large segment of our population, which has 
developed its own rules of survival. 
Pompous judges robed in majestic 
principles merely administer society's 
inequities. The statistics evidence the 
design — the percentage of black and 
Hispanic prisoners as compared to whites 
is chilling. And what we do with prisoners 
degrades us even more — warehousing 
them while furnishing all basic needs 
except heterosex is not only silly, it's 



But there's stiO the daemna of deciding 
what to do with a rapist, or sofneooe who 
boms buildings, or a man who sprays mace 
at old wmnen, or a fiithcr who bludgeons 
his two-ycar-oW dtu^ter to death. "How 
can you defend such people?" I am. asked. 

My initial rcspcMise is UMially tl»t 
everyone is, of ooone, eathled tp the best 
defense. Then 1 adnM* to ego gratificatioD 
and the joys of good crafts m a iwh^ . Most 
people nod when I mentioa the need to 
make a living. And it is certainly a 
possibility that some of my cMenti are 
innocent. 

But sometimes, Ute at night, I think 
back to when I entered law school filled 
with high expectations and principles — 
several hundred criminals ago. And I 
wonder about what I have dome aad 
whether this is how one should be 
spending his time. 

In the last homicide I tried, I defended 
the man who bludgeoned his daughter to 
death. His wife — the mother of the diUd 
— testified against him. At one point, tiie 
D.A. showed her photographs of her 
two-year-old daughter lying naked on a 
slab, her little body scarred from whipping 
and cigarette burns, holes visible where 
pieces of flesh had been torn away. 1 can 
still hear her agonizing wail. 



1 then had to put the on the «^ 
to deny being a cold, femorsefei, 2? 
The jury had to be convinced he 
human befwe they could believe lie ** 
innocent. But through most of ^ 
testimony he failed to change thit mth 
image, speaking impassively, whh a 
mask of a face. As a last resort. I surpj^ 
htm with the same pathetic morgue\^ 
of his daughter that had been shcm n 



*'Did you do this to your own daughte*^ 
I asked accodngly. 

"Some of ^ marks. Yes. My wtf. w 
her also." ^ 

••How could you do such a thing ' 

•'She'd kept crying. She'd mess m v 
pants, things like thtt. I had to teach her 
he answered tenUtWely. taken back by a 
anger. *•! tiionght that's what yourt 
supposed to do." 

From the far end of the jnrybox hold n. 
the photographs for the jur> to see. m, 
voice charged with emotion, 1 screaaed 
"Did you love her?" 

"Yes," he said softly, looking at the 
jury, •*! loved her very much." 

The jury, fmally. saw the mutihtec 
child, and. at last, heard barcK restrainec 
pain and remorse from my client. The ouk 
foreman of the jury wept. 

I was very effective. 



mpmi 





1f3M0 N Monroe 
" NORTHWOOD MAU 




3t5-7830 



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Students WaloonMi^ 

^> CowgiU 





AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE 



FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Thursday November 9. 1978 ^ 15 




Now comes Miliar time. 




^iprm Miitsr Rrc>winq Co.. Milwaukee. Wis. 



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^Th^' ^ file fsoKli cut, die cm im 

H'j'-fiiT. ^h^fl\ 'fit a-E^fic fif tlie taife 
prrnap-'^ fificaa ciegr^rt-. 

' Tha crfie woald be C -.*rse. If we were 
mtakm'd, a Chineic mea* I i TTAtt s^-re aJQ 
mmjm\ were cut tha* -i,- If 1 was 
wmkmg (Mmm ^mp, V6 6fj kLo-r.-er way. 
* 'People dcm't tlnoi these Lnings are 
he said, "bm *hey ire. 
rfwiig 'tJiat in *h.e kitchec i-i 

L 1 «r lat tiK i tf ' t m i f mi my icas to 
tfiat.'* 

Ask Hogan to relate his uih-m gcAl as aa 
FSL' chef. amS he Laughs. vo'me*hat 
ffiCTed'jl'j«j%!y , as '^hcmgh 'r*.- real reply 
migir r^rquif^: a o-ryA. i\\ Vj. II would be ixis 
f<j»urh.i In ihe end, hoi*-e«.er. his answer is 
simple: be wants »o '"niake ibis team here 
fh' ^esf food prodttctioa $crvke 
.anywtMrre." 

Has he made wmA piogress is liif fitst 
liiree weeks? 

'Td &ay we've dooe wdl lillft wtet we 
btve/* he cuntemis. *lnit tMf if ^ 
snialles? kifchen I've woffced in In ten 
ycaf»« WboiiGMeiahei^Mdsjiw thoic 




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t was "■"'."•t .V ^ 
cT ien'ed. PresiOsc:!*! C*ris:f 
av to 
'ft,^^^ 

ii:';?}'- He :t: 
i day for 1% -.i>'^-" 'f'^r 

C ' . * ' " ' t i ■ ^■arfM"^ ! . . c 

nir£'rri#»!^<tx. - ' c • ^^"^ ~ - c ..-c — , 
ci "b: ''tac ..ri./. crv*-' t-^ar ar*s 

ctioco'iait :,ns*ea4i tA i-^'a-: *be 

cptte. " He recalls a ^ • -nox's 
immgantkm as **tiK time - r.tE I - ,as ite 

u < res . ir. ' ' ' -: be^ iiie> ija%e me 
the >a*:'.rc. j 
"Y''» krj*'r* . r.e .a-^'s, "tfie anmziiig 
^h:r< ab^xi* :* is thai as as I'm dcmig 
somfhiiig i ecloy. I -t". get tired." He 
^gttres ibe hours cf* i-etplessiiess are 
worth h as long jtt liie e¥esi is a "^oad 
seccess." 

' "Pis' s what I look for. I doo*t care if it's 

f'-jf President Carter 'Or Mij''-arr:ni,ad Ali or 
he students m tibe cafeima. M the food is 



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Novambef 9 J978 / 17 



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bports 

Seminoles face *must win' game 
against Virginia Tech Saturday 




Its Isjkt two 



2S4I mad 354^, 



FSU csmek BMf 
the SpwiiBiei wafae flbe j^wfUacc «r 

S^rtwrday'f ime and wea't lookiag ptsC tlie Gobblers. 

"Evcfy gme » tmport— t Irmb heie oa ie,** Bowden 
said. ''ifwcafetofeaniBiapost-seasoaoiMleiitioB. if^ 
tins ome tbea the next fme wiD be even bigger." 

_ off a week of rest 
wdboM^m allet defeating Sooibefii hUsnssippi 58-16 in a 
game Bowdes said majr have been the Semiooies* best oi 
the year. 

**We made some mistakes — as asaal.'* Bowden said, 
'•but »e final) V vcem to be coming together. Last year we 
began to jefl at the end of the year you know." 

Bo^* den explained that with so many players out of the 
Vmtap, he hasn't been able to get the feeling of the team 
coming together, but the week off has helped 
tremendously. 



that nwy be ready to plif 
diia w«ek are Bobby BMier. Kcitti Joaes. Gi WciiejF and 
IwiBilj bit Uagtenb. iiMadii^ to Bowdea. 

As a team with ittie to lose. Bowden is aftaid Vlrgiaia 
Tech wfl come into Campbel] Stadiam Sunday night 
(7'JOf **loose as a goose, hoping to save tlieir season at 
the hands of FSU. 

Defensive coordtnator Jack Canton agrees that Virginia 
Tech can't be taken too lightly, primarily due to their 
ability to move the football. 

'They scare the heck out of me/* Stanton said. "They 
have mo\-ed the ball well but have always made mistakes 
do^A n close." 

As an example Stanton pointed to the .Alabama game (a 
35-0 loss) when Tech had first and goal on the Tide four, 
only to face a founh and 30 three disastrous plays later. 

**I hope they keep it up (making mistakes) for one more 
week." Stanton said, "because if tiiey put it together they 
could definitely have a big game." 

According to Stanton. Tech has passed o^n in Us last 




•ckfi] 



Bobby Bowden . . . hmm m mm 



two outings, using a spnnt type of offense. 

"We must concentrate on contamment." Stantoo said 
**and v^e ha\e to watch for traps up the middle." 

Against Kentucky last week, the Gobblers put the ball m 
the air 36 times, completing P for 153 yards — possibK 
setting a rec(H-d for passes attempted b> a Bill Dooley 
coached team. 

turn to GAMie,fmg§2i 



Sport of Kings 



by e.n. early 

pacific news servic* 

SKIATOOK OKLAHOMA — It*s 
called the "Sport of Kings/* but none of 
the 100 or so spectatofs crammed into the 
tin-roofed bam a few miles ftom this 
small northeastern Oklahoma town 
looked much like royalty. 

They were perched on white-washed 
bleachers that were splattered with 
blood, dirt and tobacco spit. They weie 
watching a small arena in front of them, 
anxiously wa^ii^ for the fitat boat to 
begin. 



Okiahomans use ancient 
sport of cockfighUng 
to keep Communists out 

A bald man wearing thick black glasses 
entered the ring. He held a bright red 
rooster which jerked its head back and 
forth as it glared at the crowd. 

Attached to its feet were two slender 
needles. Each steel spear was two inches 
long. Each was razor sharp. Each was 
strapped around the bird's natural spur. 

Within seconds a teenage boy also 
stepped into the ring. He carried a golden 
rooster which he stroked absent- 
mindedly. That bird also wore steel 
spurs. 

The teenager and the man walked to 




the center of the ring and pushed the 
birds wkhin inches of each other. 

The roosters pecked at each other's 
eyes, twisting and turning, trying to free 
themselves and attack. Only the two 
handlers kept the birds fpom blinding 
each other. 

The crowd came alive. 

A fat woman in a print dress waved S5 



above her head. "Got five on Big Red. " 
she cried. "Got five on red." 

A small freckle-faced boy pulled a 
w added dollar bill from his bhie jeans and 
poked a pal in the nbs. 

"Betcha that gold kiBs the red (me 
dead." he said. 



19 




Lady swimmers to get tested against 
highly regarded Alabama this weekend 



Terri Miller 



. . . FSU aft-American 



There's a sign at ^ Union Pdoitiiat reads: "Some of us 
are more capable than others, but none of us ate mofe 
amiable than aB of ns.'* It was pot op by FSU woineB's 
swimming coach Terry Maul, and thoogfa be inteads ft as a 
maxim for teamwork, it fllnstnites his view of this 
Saturday's dual meet agamst Bahama per f e ctly . 

"For us to beat Alabama it wiH take a total team elfort. 
No sm#e in^vidoal wffl mate diffetence," tiie FSU 
mentor said. 

With Alabama generally conceded to be one of the top 
ten teams in the nation (tiie actual rankings by Swimming 
Wofkl magazine are dne oat soon). FSU would appear to 
have its work cut out for it. 

"This will be our first test against tough competition." 
Maol noted. "How we fare against them will be a good 
measure of how we'll fare the rest of the season." 

The meet, in Tuscaloosa, will feature a couple of foreign 
national champions. Important cogs in the Crimson Tide's 
swimminji machine, freshmen Monica Posmark. the 



Swedish national champion m the 400 meter individiul 
me^ey (IM), and Patricia Oog. the French naticmtl 
champion in the 200 meter butterfly, are ooonted on for a 
big meet. Maul, though emphasizing their talent, points 
out that becaose Americans swim yardage distances, 
rather than meters, both swimmers will be handicapped by 
having to make more turns than they are used to. Abo. 
due to a variety of factors like size of the countries and the 
competition available, neither swimmer is necessarily the 
equal of top American swimmers. Maul said. Oug's time 
in the 200 fly. for instance, would only raiA her 20th 
among Americans. 

At FSl s discretion (the visiting team has the optioo) 
the meet will be a sprint meet, meaning the longest event 
will be 200 meters. Because that (sprints) is FStj 
strength this year, the Semtnoies stand a good chance « 
victory. 

One of FSU's big guns is Teri Miller, an All-Americifl 
last year, who will be swimming the 200 IM and free-style 



A group of 
ucco 

( ut em loose! 
, handlers released tl 
I he two cocks col 

dashing *it^ 
Lnnected. Ihey fell to 
[ogethcr as the cro^ 
reamed. 

The red rooster had ti 
>ird m the neck. The 
the red bird near 
Handlers.** the ui 
let 'em «o?" the ui 
hncf inter\al. 
Neither bird boiled 
V st(K)d Still, proud. T 
lofward. 

Suddenly, the k*''^*^'" 
mlltant feathers now 
ind blood — collapsed 
The red cock stepped 
ere an ancient gladi 
ipproval frwn the ei 
^fned to pause and gU 
"Kill 'em Johnny 1" a 
the bird by its owner's 

The bird raised a spi 
^nto the golden roost ( 
spurted fn)m its beal 
ipplauded and cheered 
declared a winner. 

Most of the rmwd was 
gambling debts, they 
)tice that Big Red also 
The handlers picked uj 
•w contestants enteret^ 
•*Good fight boy." th< 
**Thanks/* the teenaj 
>niia miss this bird," 
khe dead rooster. 
They totsed the birds 
)nt door. Within an 
kould join those two. 

itd sticks tt the bin 
ilive but imable to movi 
The sccae «t tiiis 



ABAC AUTO Pi 
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mw WW. IVMNmOfi 



It's bMfl 
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ufiKmite< 
for di 



Mow 

FMtifrkig 






VI tham^ 

tse. 

t/* Stanton said, 
middle/' 
crs put the ball io 
. ards — possibly 
by « BiU Dooley 




Big Red/' 

f puUed a 
ej«aasand 

le red one 



I page 19 



d 



jter individual 
ench national 
unted on tor a 
talent, points 
ige distances, 
andicapped by 
used to. Also, 
mtries and the 
lecessarily the 
i. Clug's time 
rank her 20th 

as the option) 
longest event 
Its) is FSU's 
ood chance of 

All-American 
and free-styie 



iockfighting 



A gwp ^ overalls and cowboy 
1 fgit^ 00 wagers hi hctwocn ^pits of 

tobicco. 

•Cut 'em loose!*' the umpire yeOed as 
ne hindkrs released the bh ' 

ashing with their prangs. Both Mrds 
nected. They feO to the gnmi ioched 
(her as die crowd ^unped nd 

reamed. 

The red rooster had impaled die gc^den 
,rd ifl the neck. The gold code had stahbed 
^he red bird near its wing. 
'Handlers/' the umpire called. 
Let em go!" the umpire ordered after 
brief interval. 

Neither bird bolted forward. The gold 
()ck stood still, proud. The red eoefc iiiclied 

forward. 

Suddenly, the golden bird — its once 
lorilliant feathers now covered with dust 
I Mood — collapsed. 

The red cock stepped neit to It. As if it 
rere an ancient i^adiator waiting for 
pproval from the emperor, tiie bird 
to pause and ghmce at the crowd. 
'Kin 'em Johnny I" a fan yelled, calling 
iMrd by its owner's name. "K9I 'em." 
The bird raised a spur and plunged it 
ito the golden rooster's neck. Blood 
purted from its beak as tiie crowd 
pUuded and cheered and the umpire 
edited a winner. 

Most of the crowd was so busy collecting 
imbling debts, they did not seem to 

that Big Red also had collapsed. 
The handlers picked up the bkds as two 
ew contestants entered. 
"Good fight boy," the man said. 
"Thanks," the teenager replied. "I'm 
onna miss this bird," he said, stroking 
he dead rooster. 

They tossed the birds outside, near the 
ontdoor. Within an hour, five more birds 
ould join those two. A few youngsters 
M sticks at the birds that still were 
ive but unable to move. 

The scene at this "Gaming Club" 



h«Wai by Uackiack trees at the end of a 

■wAIr Wmiwked road apparently is 

^^Jl^B^^^ held across the nation 
worn early fiall until July. 

B^use the sport is illegal in every slate 
but Oklahoma and Florida, it is difficult to 
te« bow many cockfights are held each 
year. 

Most cockfights arc kept secret even in 
States where they are legal. Invitation is by 
|radof moiitii. Strangers are not welcome. 
™tographs are forbidden. 

Cockfighters are reluctant to talk to 
"^porters. Telephone calls to the editor of 
The Gamecock, the sport s leading 
magazine, were in vain. 

Advertisements in that magazine and 
others reveal, however, that cockfighters 

can be found in nearly every state 

particularly southern states. New York City 
«ad sovtheiu California. 

In CaBfomia. fighting birds often wear 
dashers instead of steel prongs. As the 
name implies, a slasher is a sharp blade 
that acts like a broadsword and can easily 
decapitate an opponent. 

Most states have ruled that cockfighting 
— I&e dog fighting — is inhumane, but not 
Oklahoma. The state Court of Criminal 
Appeals overturned the 1%2 convictions of 
fenr men guilty of cockfighting. The 
justices said the men had not violated the 
animal cruelty acts because "fowls are not 
animals." 

The court based its ruling on a Biblical 
passage that distinguished between the 
''beasts of the field and the fowls of the 
air." 

In 1975, an Oklahoma legislator tried to 
change the state law to include fowls as 
animals. His pleas were greeted in the 
state legislature by chants of "cock-a- 
doo^e-doo" from the throats of his fellow 
House members and from concealed tape 
recorders. 

Legislators cheered when Rep. John 
Monks of Muskogee spoke passionately of 
the "great sport of all free countries — 
cockfighting." 

**In every country the Communists have 

turn to COCKFIGHTING. page 20 



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Tonite is 
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love 




Negotiating the east stand maze 



by gregg anderson 

fl«mfeM« wrifar 

If you spent most of early Monday morning at the 
Campbell Stadium ticket window, only to receive seats on 
the 20-yard line, then the following explanation offered by 
the athletic ticket office should interest you. 

According to the plan of the cast side of Campbell, three 
sections are reserved: the band, visitors and a special 
section for those few who bought $50 season tickets and 
contributed $50 to the athletic program. What is left 
belongs to students, assigned on a first-come, first-served 
basis. 

But it's not quite that simple. The east stand is then 
divided with all remaining seats in aisles 13-16 going to 
students redeeming 1-20 coupon books. What remains in 
aisles 9-12 goes to students redeeming 21 or more coupon 
books. (This same procedure will be in effect for the 
Florida game. However, for the Navy game, the process 
will reverse, i.e., blocks of 21 or more will sit in aisles 
13-16 and blocks of 1-20 will sit in aisles 9-12.) 

So, in effect, what Claude Thigpen, spokesperson for 
the athletic ticket office, wants to point out, is that if you're 
the second person in line at 9 Monday morning and the 
person in front of you redeems 250 coupon books, you and 
your group of 21 or more will most likely be sitting quite 
some distance from the 50-yard line. 

The answer, Thigpen suggests, is that the smaller the 
block the better chance you will have of getting the seats 
you want. 

As far as guest tickets are concerned, there is no 
problem getting them for the Virginia Tech game; simply 
go to the Campbell Stadium ticket window today through 
Saturday with a valid I.D. 

For the Navy game, those people holding student season 
tickets and student guest tickets will redeem their coupon 




Blackened areas indicate reserved seating 



books on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 13-15, 
with no option to purchase additional guest tickets. 
Beginning Thursday, Nov. 16. students who do not have 
season coupon tickets or students who wish to purchase 
additional guest tickets for the Navy game will be able to 
do so on a first-come, first-served basis. A validated I.D. is 
required. 

And, of course, there are no guest tickets left for the 
Florida game. 



Cockfighting 

taken over," Monks warned, "the first 
thing they do is outlaw cockfighting.'* 

Cockfighting was practiced by George 
Washington and Abraham Lincoln, Monks 
said. "It's an American tradition." 

Monks then claimed that the fall of Great 
Britain as a world power could be linked to 
cockfighting. "The government got so big 
it sttp{>ressed the sports of the people and 
that was the first step to ruin." 

The bill to end cockfighting was sent to a 
committee for stsdy. It has nehfer been 
discussed. 

"These birds were born to fight," says 
Ed Parks, a prominent Tulsa attorney and 
cockfighter. "Bleeding hearts get upset 
because a few chickens get killed, but its a 
hell of a lot better to die in a ring fighting 
than to have some farmer pull off your 
head and throw you in a pot for dinner." 

Breeders train the birds with "muffs" 



page 19 

which resemble small boxing gloves. They 
feed the birds secret mixtures of vitamins 
and powdered bone marrow to make their 
blood thick. Some cockfighters use drugs to 
pep up their birds, which can cost from $25 
to $2,500. 

Entry fees for bouts range from a few 
dollars to several hundred, but the real 
money comes from gambling during the 
fights — not from winning the victor's 
purse. 

Like many so-called victimless crimes, 
the gambling goes unnoticed by officials — 
at least that was the case when Big Red 
and the golden rooster fought to their 
deaths. 

The umpire for one match was a local 
deputy sheriff. 

"Shucks," he said. "Ain't nothing 
wrong in some folks havin' some goodclean 
fun. Why don't you just leave everybody 
alone." 



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ORCHESTRA 

2 shows 

7-9 and 10-12 

Tickets at Pickin' Parior 



Buy a donut & a cup of coffee, and get onother 
donut PREEl 

OR 

Buy 0 deien denutf, and get 6 FRIEI 



Buy 10 dozen or more, and save 30^ per 
dozen!!!... And students, don't forget we're 
open 24 hrs., so ce«e on in A study wMi vs. 
We've got plenty of booths, and lots of coffeelU 

«Mi stiMiMt LO. 2512 Balsam Terr. 

(Right next to Bros. Three) 



38S-2050 




OWA 
OiAUIt 



lese 



1 



lese 



224-9069 

2:00 PM 
I- 10:00 PM 
:00 PM 





another 



m're 
us. 

iffeelil 
Terr. 

IS. three) 



predicts easy victory ft 
team in state tourney 



We haven't won anv tournaments this >ear. but I 

j^.,t to \^in this one easily." 
hat s the feeling of FSU women's volleyball coach 
Rt\naud as she prepares her team tor this 
kcnd s Florida Association of Intercollegiate Athletics 
Women (FAiAW) suie tournament at Florida Southern 
llakeland. 

01 cuursc. since she is after all a coach. Reynaud 
Liiifies her enthusiasm by adding, 'if we play up to our 
[irniial then we ll win. We've been playing better each 
k and 1 tbmk we're experienced eiiouKh to talk about 

Inning." 

Working in FSU's favor is the fact that only the four 
jjor colleges playing volleyball will be represented. And 
ia field that includes Florida. South Florida, and Miami. 
;L will be the top seed. That seeding, while primarily 



Mifler Beer Hid the IM deputBKBt are 
in eight-team flag fDolMI 

laved Nov. 13-15 oo the IM. im e wited 
iuld bring SS cash and a roster to the IM 

Sports In Brief 



to be 



The faU ball tacqoetbafl 
kend at the Salley Hall tfaree>wafi 
for first evcst aad S2 €or 
erested can alga up at the HI 

oiling at 222-4023. 



wiD be held this 

ee is 
Those 

office or cafl Chadk 




mil an evt" 



KKtO'S 



Hundreds of lucky ladies 
already know about 

LADIES NITE 

TOMMY'S 

Free draft til 11 p.m, & free 
admission for all Ladies all nite. 
Fantastic! The best in Town! 
Tonite & every Thurs. 
at Tommy's. 
Tonite, listen & dance, dance, 
dance to the hot rock 'n roll 
sounds of 



LINDA 



HILLTOP 
APTS. 

FALL LEASES 
AVAILABLE 
Furnished & 

Unfurnished 1 
bedroom, pool, 
saunas, rec room, 
free cable T.V. 
411 Chapel Drive 
Colli Bob at 222-2056 
Short walk to FSU 



based on this year's 20-9 match record, does acknowledge 
FSL' s first place finish in this tournament last year. 

Reynaud's enthusiasm is also well founded by this 
year's standards. The Seminoles have defeated both 
Miami and South Florida alreadv. though South Florida's 
Brahmans did take FSU to the three-game limit twice 
(matches are based on taking two of three games). Florida, 
though untested by FSU. is not considered to have a strong 
team this year. 

Finishing first or second, howeser. is a necessity to the 
continuation of FSU's season It takes a top two finish to 
advance to the regional tournament (also in Lakeland), 
where another first or second finish is needed to advance 
to the national tournament, hekl this year in Tuscaloosa. 
Ala. 

"It has been my goal since I've been here to take FSU 
volleyball to the national tournament. " Reynaud noted. **I 

would hate for our season ^r..-^ 





P 
t 



mm ' 

■'I • 



>Wc11 set caster. 



No extra coat for cars with 
factory air or tonnoD baia. 

Parta extra, if n eeded. 



^ . 1 FEATURE OFFER | 1 

I LUBE& 
OIL CHANGE 




Here's an inexf>ensive but 
valuable service recommended 
every 4. (XX) to 7,000 miles for 
most vehicles. Included are up 
to hve quarts of oil and a 
professional chassis lubrication. 



All cars and 
light trucks. 



CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT 

Pii(M Gm^ Niif* 10 • Nw* 14 





p 



DAYS SABfE AS CASH 
HBESIONE STORE 501 N MONROE ST 

Mm - fii 7:39 • 5:31 Sit t M 5 222-0190 



I If 




4 



ri 



r 



:;; - 'IP 




I. 




"iff 







t* JEAMS AT POOm UKtUkMO^ 

B<rf on* «t r«B. pr<«, M p»«r ar«> r 
S' i*tw styles & 



HAWKEKS FOH TRAOIM6 KWTI 

♦■llp-'T* */ ~ For fv! '?'i«e'i •ffoTT't^ 




•U>CM PIANO TUM II 




GAY 



Cor-' o«r • « 




SO^*? — 



correcting ^ - ♦^anscripn 

of tape. Re-< C4i> SJ^Stli 9 to 5. 



OLYWI A CLCC. 
TVFEWBfTr = 
GOOD aWKKTfOif ASVI1«G If.: X 



br aot at CBI»i| Ovc -=e« • 

•o F S 0 ca - 1 - .ssume keasc er<: 'a 



6 X Calt for 

A.V 4:30-5;38PM. 





JJg«iA Piim,,p^ 



I. HooOec ^099 mg 
reg.SIS POOt 
Eckerdii ft 




CHATE JJ Jjg g y ^^yVfj^y 

1 btir h/rrt c'«»f' 3"ji«t, •■Mid' 
proof - pooi. i*unor/. Sl4«- 



PART TIME EVENineS. 

3n* 




Part time ciertt tfpUt. 1-2^ hr». • 



MOPCD MAjrc itTI ve«oso<«x 
patf. Exce^ cond. Ai! »ccesori«s 

» do* tars CHEAP S7S-W74 




BEEA SIGM. WILL 
fISw Oft HIGNEST WO. 



01^ w Etmo om att. for sua^ 





ft Mmv ^ tiJtt. Acia 
D^iance parms S 5 at. MaMia^ 

c, 

fietf iwi>iw.iui*. Taft. COfiafe' or 
B.arbar Sfrlifig. i'22' A&ca «c--«« 
Piory. Can 



«^ otir a«MS-«r 
dsp^iaftcas. Call 



haul eff 



BUNDY ALTO 
ASK FOR Kl 



TV U IN 
BUT GOOO 



ft WHITE USED 
CONDITION CALL 



fum. 3 bdrm ac-ar^menf, 
wif*"- cer.tra! a-h to so-Wet far 
Interested}? Call 222-^4* 



C-^ERSEAS X>e$ — 
time Europe, S. America, 
As>a. etc AM ftalds, tSOO laM 
nnor*f / expenses paid, s•9^tseein9. 

'-t — te internationaJ job 
Center, Bok 44M-FB Bcrlbelay, CA 



IMMACULATE TYPINO I'm m 
broke I'm livin' in a tent writn noAiin' 
to eat; i got holes in my sftoes arvs 
can^ afior« bean. But I 




1 2 r Old bHK%itir> ofnm I 

fcfcyy: 5> o*don r««ri«ver i^^i^ ^ I 
tatooM or 

If taw ar founo otM* 



CAN WE TALK? SAY HI TO 
SA AMD KIM 



LOST 
RO. 



LAKC tKAOFOtO 

CAT. IF SfEN CAli 



FOR SALE-S FSU.FLA TIOCCTS ON 

PfiESS SOX SIDE 
OVER tu u^\yto 



ROOM MM O N . V3UTIL. GREAT 
HOUSE OTSW WOOOEO LOT PETS 



STUDENTS^ 




BRAND NEW ELECTRIC WINCH 



Z ' PLUTE« 
E K HOONS GOOO SHAPE GOOD 
E GOOD XAAAS PRESENT! !f 



ftEAN Sk 1 r a 

ratty Write L. OeJohn M* 
Oaytona Baach, Fta. 321t 



Oayou need *oc score on 
sdwH a<Jrr. fSS*or exam ?Tal 
GMAT _SAT MCAT on 
and at YOUR 

N 



VOUR 
GNI 



TUNA GRINDER AND 
SODA SIJi at THE 
Tam. St. llaHMpM FRI 



OR 



FEEHAM: 
Ms a party Mi 



CLASSIFIED AOS WILL BE 'A - £ N 
AT FLAMBEAU BUSINESS OFF ICE 
FRI. NOV. IB ONLY, f^ll 

6444BXS. uNioM omccs MX I 

CLOSED. 

VAMCEY 

Have a HAPPY IfBi BIRTNOAYI 



* « P*««>c b. 

^m^^ ^MHP*MHMB affflHffI IffMiAM 



setoff" 

♦ rige^ ^ j^e^ 5, Bernyi r, M*v 
Gerne dfspos t,or P»y»^ 57^^7361 



NOV. 11 HILTON MOTEL 
234-l3nor57«-SQt3 
ISiRINOON TIL 4::3B 



«jOPPY joe LIVING ROOM SET 
Bictu<»e& 7 pM»:e% Nat Ad. at ttOB 
YOUR COST BRAND NEW ON 
eaiiB iMou ra^ii ili to FSU PO Bbm 11 

CONNELLY SHORT LINE WATER 

ca '^222 3012*"** 



♦NAVY FSU T f C K ET S W A N T E D 
CALL 57M)01« AFTER 5 
CALL MUMB BEFORE 



Professional 
papers. 



-typist. T< 



PHI OELTS. TMANICS FOR A 
GREAT DINNER WE LOVE YOU 
YOUR LIL SIS' CHERI 




MOTOR DRIVE FOR CANON F-l IN 

GOOO CONDITION PAV CASH 
CALL 22MB4S OR MA- 5505 AS< FOR 
JONATHAN 

WANTED: FSUUF FOOTBALL 
TICKETS CALL SMIM 
tam-llpm 

FMML RAAMT TO SHARE 2 BORM 
APT MISSION RIOGE DEC OR JAN 
SmSM-VWTIL S>»B<M 

A""" 5a,' ; ♦.'ckets to FSU Fli 
Bame^efer mesn togettier Call Pat 



Tha Other BHe Hair Salon 
Nana *o^— 0^ na'-'S'^'**-. 
'Mflroowc^OTy sDe: a.- *itn Ner«. 
cut. Ca Tii vm or wall la 
Tennessee. Ask for 



' c - ' experienced prof essiaaai 
s-r- e a'/ witft IBM seH 
'■^oei*r' ter 75c to 1.00 per pap 
3aMS24. Special rates available. 

The 0«wr Bile Hair Salen antf Plii^ 



JOGGING SUITS. SJMtL.XL 
awir WB to cftoose from reg 33.SB 

POOR RICHARD S Detween 
ft Eckcrtf's m West 



such a great pcnon. T>»arM so 
for all ypu ve done. Love, Curly 

CATFISH ALLIANCE WiN 
fat7:3Bin 3M 
a 




174 FIAT ir-,[^fck 
CONDITION See at 
TeaaaHae St. 224^145 



HEED TO BUY A USED LONG 
FEMALE WINTER COAT MEDIUM 
6000 ^'ZE CALL *44-S«9B after 4:00pm 



WANTED 7 FSU 



FLA 
BIOS 



TICKETS 



specials of tt>e «veek 
Mon. 2B prct off Hennas 
Tues. 20 prct. off colors 
Wed. 20 prct. off pemnok bodr 
and relaxart. CaH miMBar 

;-e* POOR RICHARD'S 'em 
pants or iaans for only S).i0 (« 
anddry 1st + bring ll te sh a es you plan 

to wear w n^em) next to Publix in 
Wesr¥»fOOO SnopP'Og Cer.te^ 576-2196 

open 7 days a wee< 



TAKE THE TIME TO OO IT 
tias 



2i17 W 




ttauar „. r" a 



St. 574-1511 



I to your hair so it will be 
•0 you. Lanham Products now at 
•ws HairaminB. ma W. 
I St. SM.15I1. 



ZETA'S: LETS CASTAWAY AM> 

AND PARTY FRI. HITEI 
CA CR KB PF-FP 



The Alpha Eptilen Pi 



TOO GOOO TO BE TRUE 
IV7S Vega station wagon 
condition new brakes ft Ifraa 
if hit from rear 
I at *44-407S M F 8 left 



,FM 
firm. 



in BOOtf TUTOR FOR STAT SBU CALL 



A.C.* rant graof 



77 Chevy Van, a//pv 
Custom paint, mags, < 



PW Sf 



Carpenter -bike mechanic etc. etc. . . . 
nee<Js winter F T worlL Available 
weekdays al femaans ft eves. Call 
, Terry a4.fy. 

- Ride to or near Dayton, OH for x-mas 
break. Wt'^ s'-a'e dr v ng & a'' 
Anyone going call Bill 6H 44e«. 



Fast accurate typist-IBM correctins 
selec. -papers, " " 
Durtiin S76-l«Bt 



Am.lANCE REPAIR 

Service on ati major appliarvces. air 
conditioning and heating. Sales 
reconditioned units witti 90 day 
warrarity. Call Marsha*', days 
5f9-7t7t {pocket beeper 
Evening S7B48M. LICENSED 



NOVEMBER HAIR SPKlALfl 
OUR REG S35 ACID PeUM SS 
SZ2 ORGANIC HENNA SIS 
CALL BOB. 

WAREHOUSE HAIRCUTTERS. 



CANOE RENTALS on Waku !a River 
ft US 9B. Full day & :; day. CoM 
tfrinks ft beer available 
except Men. fSS-Mll 



evvasmicalty heJd Hcv lo 
AEPi House. T^e oeg 
p.m. Bring you*- a 
ready for a cosrr c r.me; 

KIMWOur first 
right along 

lets do it aoaMl IH 




BAIT 



la quit 
NICE TALK 



L»t year's CAWTHON I TES: ROMlHa 

at Big Daddy's Thurs nite ft beat flia 
clock ftie way we used la. So 



PHIMU^ 
WE ARE STOKED FOR HOMIE. 
COMING...XET^ 00 IT 




7) TR6 GOOO CONDI Tl 
ONE 0WI4ER, LOW 

078^737 





1949 Road T\Kwmr 
nMist see to appreciate 
Ask for Gary 



'70 PONT LEMANS exc cAC autO 
PS PB AC best o«er 599 9731 J^ijr or 

see at 5»gn>a Chi house oni^ 



KRISTEN— THE TYPIST 57i 

F RMMT 2 BORM DUPLEX 
TO FSU n^Vl UTIL ft 
OWN ROOM CALL 



Typir>g (BM 
Sk per 



fast 
OBL 



t 



AI EAN A LEAK FOR MY 



NEED 5 TICKETS 
GAME CALLS 



TO FSU-FLA 



IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! 
Servd $1.00 for your 2S6-pa9e, 
order catalog of Collegiate 
10,250 topics listed. Prompt 
BOK 29fa7'B» Los liiMilM, CaUf. 



MEATBALL GRINDER AND 
DRAFT OR SODA $1.25 at THE 

1312 W. Tenn. nam-4pm Thur s. 

Thursday is "SEX NlTfi" with 
Oysters on the half slioR SI J5 Ooa 
LMUrtaau » pitctier, \M gi«»s 
y-ttpjw. at Brew ft Cue 482 N. Duval 

^triots! Help political prisoner push 
people Qom&->. PrHie. purpose, pay, 
—1? Part-tinr»e. Jim - 



"SOUTHERN GENTS" 




Tutor for 




iaf accounting 
a44-S49S. Call 



Cowiemparary Styieit 



N75 KAWASAKI 400. VERY 
CONOtTION, CALL 5744424 
SM OR BEST OFFER 



HONDA 500F Wn Yoshmura cam. 
Kerker headers. KftMa. LOCBhart Oil 
Cooler ft Therma a l a i , Lirtw Mags, 
Continental tires. luBBBBt rack. 
Better than new. 575-: 



wfHing to pay 
premiums. Caif STMm befwpohftf 

p.m. 

WINTER QUARTER SUBLET 
Fumtshad lieaee ar apt. far RaM 

ralMred parents of faculty fantily Can 
■ ^ avail. 




HOLIDAY PORTRpUTS in convenient 
pac ka g es — 2 S>(H, 4 wallets only 
$17.50- 1 txlO, 2 5x7s, 4 wallets only 
$27 50 thru t«ov. 25 at Oeimar Stadia 
Photography 1171% S. Rtaaraa SI CaR 
224-3^4 



TYPING. FAST, EXECUTIVE 
AAACHINE THESIBr PAPERS;, CCT. 
70c pg. 38^-4843. 



R ft R FRYDE!VBORG 
ACOUSTIC FOi-K jAZr 
7HlfR.FRt.SATJ^T THE ALLEY 

HAPPY BIRTHDAY THUMP 
I HOPE THIS IS THE BEST EVER 
YOUR A SUPER FRIEND AND A 
GREAT ROOMMATE HAVE A 
GREAT TIME FRIDAY NIGHT 
LOVE YA LOTS PUMP 



HILLEL IS SPONSORING A 
"MEET YOUR JEWISH FACULTY- 
WINE 8. CHEESE PARTY NOV H 
J4PM PENWOOO APTS Na^lS 
FOR HfFO. CALL 




Panhel lenic's 7^ 



I 00 CHAIR 
CANING. Gaod 

able rates CaN 
evenings. 57^-M2. 



WEAVING AND 



f, the parade, bed race, and Fair t«ov. 
IBr and ends Nov 11 with ttte girls 
asking tt>e guys to the Vir. Tech. 
ganr>e. Proceeds 90 to MDA. 



ANY BAND THAT PLAYS ANY 
ORIGINAL TUNES NOW IS YOUR 
CHANCE TO GET ON TELEVISION 
FSU SPECTRUM CALL 222S5B3 

_ .MICHELOB 
At THE PUB 3-7p.m. 
St. 



GEORGE PRISON 
WOLaua Yau. 




iMw is going to win Mattress Man? 
Find out Thurs. Nov. 9 at flia 
PanheNenic Fall Formal. 



Tiie Betenent _ _ 
The Kcnhidtv Derby? 
The PreaNnass? 

NO 

If s tt« Sleeper event of the 



km. 314 Vwimnttj Ui»«' 

644-5744 

9 AJD. to 3 p.lD- 



Resumes 

Invitations 

Posters 

Cards 

Fliers 

Booklets 



Menus 

Br.H h jre« 

Newsletter 
Books 



ity. Speedy frec sty 
,aJc wiH Btoo be n 
,nes. YBiBB. by tlie I 
^ncr hcibcbIb Ir 
Kiuct^ofMteiiiiiwiat 

4«ul also looks to his fi 
Ihe medley relay. Kii 
.^s\ stroke). Kathy Mi 
j^usie Y ates (FS> wUh 
free style relay. MUl 
kith Jeannic Dowdk < 



ajne iromiM 

lowever. the Gobblers 
only 119 yards for 
ieoior wide receiver Kui 
ly. Bccording to i 
linole starting quarterl 
Jackie Flowers. 
\H would be easy to lool 
*bvt we can't do tha 




Rm. 314 UniversitY U 

camera 



Sign up in Ro( 
or call LPO 

[f^'H b© |>ack in plen 




NEWOPLt AMt^ 



TRADING POtTT^Tr I 

lim each Th^ 

far luivfc 1 



[WARDTOFINDERI 1 

Knale tonoWi hair. 1 yr o»<i' 
10m rttriever, female, no 
^ofh dogs tatooed on right 

V w.th S.S. no., must I 
seen or found dImm c 

, J^NO LAKE tRAOFORO 
ILOW CAT. IP Mill au 

|5 3153. 



jr keys on a plastic 
photographs, if four 
| l A44 2606 Sm all Reward 

)ne coHDpiete set of nlmbi^ 
I aroa of Bwkafiirt Manor 
"^Jtkm. Phon« 575 7351 



/ 




iRfOO 



fWor? 




t# ITniversity Union | 

f44 
to 3 p.m. 



les 
lions 

is 



ts 



Menus 

Brochures 
Pamphlets 
Newsletters 

Books 
Bulletins 




liikiWiiMiili 



s 

. 1,1 ' 



u\. Speedy free-stylers Susie Yales and Jfeaanie 
idle will tlio cootribtttors to Soninole 

kuncs. Yates, by the bye, will be going np against a 
nemesis in Alabama's Karee Cos. Both are 
^juds of Miami swim teams, aod will be sqaafiog off in 
^) vard free-Style. 

laul also looks to his relay teams for big performances. 
Ithe medley relay. Kim Averill (back), Lisa Nencioni 
ast stroke). Kathy Mffler (Teri's twin sister; bstlerfly) 
Susie Yates (FS) will cany Seminole hopes. In the :HX) 
ree style relay. Miller (Kathy) and Yates will team 
Iwith Jeannie Dowdle and Kim Dunlop to form a very 



from page 18 

wever. the Gobblers were pathetic on the ground, 
ling only 119 yards for the afternoon, 
jeniorwide receiver Kurt Unglaub may be ready to play 
jrday, according to Bowden, which should please 
molt starting quarterback Wally Woodham and split 
1 Jackie Flowers. 

|li would be easy to look past Tech to Navy," Unglaub 
"but we can't do that." 






Unglaub , ^ 

. . . may be reacfy for Virginia Tech 



mediaty 


pe 


314 University Union 

camera ready ail 


644-5744 



larianna Caverns 
Trip 

|aturday, November 11 

iign up in Room 238 Union 
or call LPO at 644-6710 

Ne ll be beck m plenty of time for the footbaft 

me. 



quick foursome. 

^ ''Because this is a sprint meet, we're talking about 
victories being determined by a couple hundredths of a 
second." Maul said. "The starts and finishes will be the 
most important thing. We couid easily win or lose this 
meet by the length of a finger.*' 

Though the season doesn't begin to heat up until next 
week, when the Seminoles take on Daytona Beach CC and 
Auburn in back-to-back meets on Thursday and Friday. 
Maul is very excited about the encounter in Tuscaloosa. 

"This will be an indication of what to expect nationally 
from us," Maul said, adding "1 think we can beat them." 





Rm. 314 University Union 

644-5744 

9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 




Philippe JuDot, 
Married to Royalty: 
''I got my position as 
husband of Princess 
Caroline with a Mediatype 
resume." 



FOUR 
SEASONS 
APTS. 

Furnished and 
unfurnbhed 1 
bedroom with heated 
pool, sauno, rec. 
room, laundry. 

630 W. Virginia St. 



V w W » » "< » V 



LEASES 




^^^^^^^^^^ 5|l ' ^^^^ 



MEET 
MISS FU. 

I Wendy Sue Cheatam 



fpAR-AMPEAU Thursday Nf- q lorm ' -rt 



i 



Get a free lood of firewood 

vntli oflch Ribof MfoodborainQ 
Stove perclMso* 

Force poperwhito Narcissus 
Bulbs - NOW for Christmas 

Bloom -Bulbs 35^ each 
Ibnksyivins Ceclw bedsdl wM bvdt, 
in 10«di kmm»B bwUts - $7.«S 

Town koUNTRT 

fMRDENCENTERL 

fi33W.TH>litfgSr 
305-3333 



THURS-FRI-SAT 
NOV. 9, 10, 11 



• i 1 



i lii I 



III 



If I 

mi 



Fomous Maker Tops 
20-60% OFF 

Sossoon Stralghtleg 
Jeans 40% OFF 

Famous Maker 
pants A skirts 

25-60% OFF 



I 1 



r 



10-7:30 
10-9HM 
10-7:30 

1410-5:1 



I 



Westwood Shopping Center 

57MI02 



ife; 






1 -T 



.J ■ 




II 




fast 

free 
delivery 
and 
service 




OUR SUPBWI CM B Pl B F 



Ha" 



DCMitOS DELUXE 
Onofcs, G»f«jr. Peppers, 



$7 JO 



G^oijnrJ Beef 



tr 



Extra Thck Ouft 
Hot Pepper Rings 



Our dHms do nor cany 
more than $20X)0 



Prices do not inciude tax. 



Yoi> u}/. '»&'<p us sew you 
(and others) faster! 



bffMyoycsiMS. 



2 /^r^*;- ^ answer. g^MPt 
dearly, gvve your dorm 
name, room number, phone 
nunbef 0he one we can 
fwecti )^0if at dtortngi #ie 
iDfloising haV hour)* the 
Sbe 0^ p'zza, what you 
want on n, r*ow marry 
Cokes you warn. ar>d ar^ 
mkMonai informatior) /oo 

Mneooeasarv We don't 
fised your 



3, tf you haven't been caied 
down within 30 minutes of 
the tmne you piaced your 
ordor, call uel We may have 
a wrong phone flumber or 
and be unable to 
you. 



CCop^rigm 1976 



4 Ha /e your Checker 
mor>ey ready for the dn^. 

No checks will be cashed 
Without aOominos P.na 
check cashing card 

5. Please stay off ttie 
phone' The phorte ts the 
onfy way we can teW you 
that your pizza has arrived! 

6. Wiian tfie drtvor cals you 
(usuaiy betows he teewss 

the store), he wiN ask you to 
meet him cbby, 

e***^'*?' ''■'i^' 'jA-;- .- 0'' 5 or 
10 rTur.',.*e", ^ tease oe 
there, he can i wait or otier 
pizzas MffN be late' 

We reserve the nght to 
bmit our detivery area 

Hours 

4:30-1:00 Sun -Thurs. 
4:30-2.00 Fri.'Sat. 




Sening la 



Ca 

pe 
to 



WASHING 
telef^ned Isra 
chem Begin and 
Sadat yesterday 
gain approval ot 
the Mideast ncj 

President 
iekplKHie this 
Sadat in Cairo a 



Florida 



Monday 




Serving Taii«iii«i5i>t;t; loi uu > t rs 



Homecoming week 

FSr begins that annual celebratMin of 
schvH)! spirit knimn as Homect^ming on 
Thursday, and fcstuitios uill conimiic 
ihrouiih Saturdas. For a complete 
schedule of events and story, see p«ge 4. 



Carter re-enters 
peace talks, tries 
to break impasse 



by jim anderson 



WASHINGTON — President Carter 
telephoned Israeli Prime Minister Mena- 
chem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar 
Sadat yesterday in an apparent attempt to 
gain approval of a new formula for breaking 
the Mideast negotiating deadlock. 

"President Carter talked on the 
telephone this afternoon with President 
Sadat in Cairo and Prime Minister Begm in 



Toronto about the current peace 
negotiations,*' a White House statement 
said yesterday. 

Carter called Sadat from the White House 
shortly after noon from a Maryland farm 
where the president was attending a prayer 
session. 

"It's obvious there were .substantive 
discussions." a White House source said. 

Secretary of State Cyrus Vance won 
tentative approval early yesterday for a 



formula to break the negotiating deadlock, 
but the Israeli and Egyptian leaders have to 
endorse the proposal. 

Diplomatic sources said Vance will 
present the plan to Begin at an airport 
meeting in New York last night in 
America's latest bid to bring the month-old 
peace talks to a successful end 

Vance and Begin were scheduled to meet 
at 7:30 p.m. EST yesterday during the 
prime minister's stopover at John F. 
Kennedy Airport on a trip from Canada to 
Israel. 

The sources said the United States 
reached the compromise formula in talks 
that began Saturday morning and wound up 
1 a.m. EST yesterday with a 3 '/z -hour 
meeting between Vance and Israeli Foreign 
Minister Moshe Dayan. 

Sources close to the talks said the U.S. 
meetings with Israeli and Egyptian 
dipomats produced agreement on the key 
issue in dispute — linking the Israeli- 
Egyptian treaty to an overall Middle East 
peace. 

But the sources cautioned that fmal 
agreement depends on the consent of both 
governments. Officials in Cairo and 



Jerusalem earlier refected terms v^orked out 
by their negotiating teams in Washington. 

The Vance Dayan meeting at the Stale 
Department was the culmination of a day of 
bargaining that saw Vance visit the 
Washington hotel where the Egyptians and 
the Israelis are staying. 

The secretary- of state — accompanied by 
his chief mediator. Alfred Atherton — 
engaged in a sort of mini-shuttle, iiuing 
from one part of the hotel to the other to 
sound out the two sides on ways to end the 
deadlock. 

The sources reported a total of more than 
seven hours of meetings extending mto the 
early hours of yesterday. 

The major problem was the text of a 
treaty preamble about negotiations for the 
future of the Palestinians living in the 
occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. 

The Egyptians want a firm, explicit 
commitment for talks to end Israel's 
military rule in the occupied territories. The 
Israelis have objected to the subject being 
mentioned at all in the treaty. 

The negotiating teams were also working 
out the specific details of the Israeli 
withdrawal from the Sinai Desert. 




Tallahassee iuumulou 

by pyranUd money scheme 



by Helen felsing 



Sex, drugs, and nrjrstkal tevthJtiotu 
move over. 

To that triad of indescxyMdiie ecstasies 
most now be added TallelMssee's Imtcst 
high: the get-rich-qukk chain letter. 

'it*s taken Tallahassee by storm," said 
one informant, who Hkes everyone eise In 
this story wished to renain anonyams. 

"IT" is m chain or pyramid letter 
currently drcnlating hi town wbkk^ at is tfK 
case with most cham letten, ptoames 
mcakulaMe weahh as reward for a smiA 
investment and a wfllingness to recrait a 
few frimdB iirto the schesK. 

Unlike most anch operatioBs. however, 
this one depends upam hawt-to-haad 
passage of information. Instead of use of Ae 
U.S. mails, its perpetrators datm that it is 
therefore legal. 

According , to some sources, the scheme 
came to town m August via some Sooth 
Florida visitors to a quasi-religious 
group here; but since that tmie is has 
surfaced in just about every sodtf circle 
both on campus and in state fofvmmem. 
Authorities had aheady ^scovered the 
scheme operating last summer in 
JadbSonviUe; but when it hat Tallahassee, it 
be^m to move at an unprecedented rate. 

**This thing really flew through 
Tallahassee,** said one bank official who 
refused to be identified. ** We've been 
watching it for quhe awhile. In fact, by now 
the market here is pretty saturated.** 



government official, also 
anonymous, agreed. **Yoa'd be anmied," 
he confided, *1ioir many pcopk tMs 
involves. I've been approadied twice 
mysetf. A lot of very, very responsible 
people are in tm it." 

For those few who aren't yet, here's how 
the pyramid scheme works: 

* A friend explains the operation to you. It 
appears ftfl-safe, is da^Md to be legid, and 
you are promised a potentkl income of 
about $50,000 based on an oflginal 
investment of $75. it drcniates only mmemg 
friends, you are told, people you can tmst. 

* Yon are enticed. Yon pay yom friend 

to buy telo tlie adwme. Yon reoeive 
a packet wIMi contains tiwee kema: a SIS 
savh^ bond (purchase price SIS. 75), a fist 
of ten names, and a set of instructions. 

* The savings bond is already made out 
as a gift bond to a specific person — the 
person whose name appears as number one 
on your list of ten names. Yoo may the 
savings bond to that person. (U.S. Mail 
fraud laws prohibit mailing chain letters, 
Imt do not pruhiblt maSteg savings bonds.) 

* You retype yonr fist of names and 
addhesses. twice, omitting the name of the 
number one person to whom you just nmfled 
the bond, and elevating everyone else on 
the list up one notch. (3 b e c o mes 2, 2 
becomes 1. etc.) When you get to number 
10. which is now vacant. INSEIT YOUl 
OWN NAME. 

fnvfi to PYHAMiO, fmgm B 



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tfce lack or effort 



virasted effort because 



andcafidKlales. ft doesfi't take inlo account 



the part of 
the 



ll^p.^- - -1 - — — — — r • — w ^ 

f would iiiMHe ll»t have mm pasted the ti^me a no-vmt ts a protest. 
Yowii fwofifo ii>ho ifo iwt vole are tfcm 
Wheii coOi^ flntfenB (MippOMdhr the 
ciliseii^) doft^ t bo^er to iiole, ft f» a hM that oitf- ceriera 
the vole (oir p0liticai vote) f> ill fiiy eyes to comfoiie ^ 
be to proce^of ft. 0y fwt ifotwif fiie are shoMTing oir bcfc <^ 

flale of this comHry. My poM is that «ie hane no justiffcatioii for our apathy. This 
couft^ is in fact sitting In an envwomncntaiy, ec ono mi c ^, polibcaHy, and 
spinniallv perffous posture. 

Senator EdivardM Kerwiedy set forth last tveek^ 'Vcpifescnlatii«0Oi«rviiiiem» 
the ftorst shape i Have seen it. The Senate and the House are akvash in a sea of 
specif mterest comnbutions md lobbying " Horn that the same businessfnen who 
are d ig f t ro y ln g our envu^omntnt, ex^kiitmg tfie 3rd world, lying to die pubbc, and 
threatening our very future, are thetmehei becotmng (if they haven't already 
becomel the powerful new pditicai party of America, is it not teie to attack 
voter-apathy especRilfy on the college — Student Ccwernmeffit — levd w^^ 
are formed? Is it not time for an awakening of that sense called Americaiiism, an^ 
an allegiance to safeguarding the soundness of America? We must rise to our 
f^- rx.fis^lftv ^/"fr J/ wfiat students have dKivays been — the vanguards of chan^! 

I f^r*- IS no longer <}r> «f%ajse for us to remain dormant, the writing is on tfie wall, . , 

» 

jerrod Miles Levine 



The Tranvrendental Meditation Program is offering a free introductory lecture 
Tuesday. \f/y 14 at 8 p m in SU Room 240. This is sponsored by the Students 
Intermational MedftatKm Society (SlMSj. 



IRHC Fia Center 

Dorm students are needed to help in the selection and programming of films in the 
IRHC Film Series, Here's your opportunity to do yoiM- part in the Inter-Hesident Hail 
Government. For further information, contact IRHC President Bob Sanborn ^ 



John Convers of ^i- 

of Macomb anc C<i*» S^reei or« 




» • - * 




Cior ^ - ^>*«* Ike H:«. ^ : 

wCr-~'r- ~ '"5 , ;'-'~,auri 



Hey, dab Presadeots 



I 



Al studefit organizations are reiiuireo to 
QrgarMzations office. 318 Ufuon. The deadbi 

Organiz^ions that have not re-^egtstered with the 
runmng the risk of havmg their funds from and 

' .c-jr organization is stdl active and i iiiend ls to 
ilik i^nioft and fiH out die re-tegistialii 
17 If tfMs IS not cione, your organization wfl be plaoed 



forms belo i e 4il0 p.m.. Friday, ^owtOgf 



Debate team cuiptiMres widMiw 

The FSL Debate Team, under Coach Vteilyn Young has coRStsfeenti^ scored 

V KXones in recent toumaffients 

The firs* .ictory too«. p.ace 'se '^^^%ef^ Gi SetJt 29., at Midiie Je^^f^see Si^ 
, ' .ers *^. /khen the varsrty tearr. ._or»o Lee Rooen ^orc r^niSTacC :™. ol^ ot 
ifeS *eaiT5 e':erec there 

v^^. Be^c-jstand Lfsa Bounds .a^srty team the nert^^er* efid car^ " 
o.* 25 teams entered at the Brvmard Community Coiiegr ::-:e^- " "i- 
^"Tent, Lisa i*as named Third Best Speaker and Mar> rr* - be«! 

"'^ .Vake Forest Unwrsitv Tournan^em, heW dw' the October j ' 
Honr. Carolina, aea ' ' Befc- and Bounds as t^^ .a^^ team. Out of a : : i oc 
tfitrty teams represenicd, the t%%o or^ors placed ar. .-r.p^e5>i%e loivth po< : ' 

Congratulations to the debate team and Coach Young for such 
performances 

ff % V . /. : , d !ike to knoMi more aoout debating the team meets every Tuesday 
at 7 p .:. Room 402 Diffenbaugh. Ail mterested students are Mekomed 







The Govern mpj 
of events for Lo\ 

Moriday, Nov 
Union, 3-6 p m 

Tuesday, Nov 
1 junior, 1 soph 

V\ . unesdav, N' 
tf uin 20 agenc irs 

TKursddy, NoM 
Bellamy. 

Friday, Nov 1 

Monday, Nov 
I>espite extensive 
socialist debate i< 
Government Dej 
Billings and Dr 
R.C V B. Negati^ 
Anderson of ihv 
Flambeau This 

Tuesday, Nov 
Professors in Pol 



CPE will prf'se| 

Wednesday nit; hi 
author of nuni**r(>i 

distribution Don 






ADVERTISE MFM 



•^'search Group 
'5 the author 
(with Ralph 

126 Bellamv 

nmoNi! 



certificate of 

Both winners 
^ parties) or 
|ed. Forms are 

desire to get 

|s Wednesday, 



at St Mary 
?r 14th at 7:30 

>use Judiciary 
|t is sponsored 
ivited. 



[h the Student 
Oct. 20. 
Itions office are 

stop by Room 
lay, November 
tatus. 



:ly scored key 

inessee State 
'd fifth out of 

came in first 
itest In that 

best. 

|3 weekend in 
It of a total of 
position 
Ih impressive 

uesday night 
)med. 



icer 



iiii!'^firti,ivi,i,i- >iii <( 



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fiii:iiii'ii \\ 1 1 



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L*^' III", 




P#MrtO! Chip Wood 



Government Students Association 

The Government Students Association is having a definite conscious-raising week 

of events for Government students: 

Monday, Nov. 13 — first day two day Placement Conference, State Room, 

Union, 3-6 p.m. 

Tuesday, Nov. 14 — GSA elections for Undergraduate Policy Committee, 1 senior, 
1 junior, 1 sophomore, and 1 freshman, Room 64 Bellamy, 5:30 p.m. 

Wednesday, Nov. 15 — Second day of Placement difif«renc« r- federal recruiters 
from 20 agencies will be present. State Room Union, 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 

Thursday, Nov. 16 ~ Second meeting of FSU Model Senate team, Room 62, 
Bellamy. 

Friday, Nov. 17 — 4-hour Happy Hour, 4-8 p.m. 

Monday, Nov. 20 — Governmental Alternative Forum, the topic "Resolved: 
Despite extensive changes in World conditions over the past century, the capitalist- 
socialist debate is as relevant as it ever was/' The nnxierator is Dr. Mowlam of the 
Government Department with scheduled participants: Affirmative team — Dr. 
Billings and Dr. Abcarian of the Government Department, and Bill Finlay of the 
R G Y.B. Negative team includes Dr. b of the EcofKNnics Department, Dr. 
Anderson of the History Department, and Rick Johnson, General Manager of the 
Flambeau. This will be held in NRoom 143 Bellamy, at 8 p m. 

Tuesday, Nov. 21 — Dr. Mowlam will speak on "Women as Students and 
Professors in Political Science" in Room 64 Bellamy at 4 p.m. 



G. William Domhoff 



GPE will present G. WILLIAM DOMHOFF, author of "Who Rules America?" 
Wednesdav night, Nov. 15 at 7 30 p.m. in Room 120 Carraway. Domhoff is the 
author of numerous other books and articles dealing with political and social power 
distribution. Don't miss this renowned sociologist in a rare appearance. 



FLORlDAfLAMBEAU Monday, Novembef 13, 19H / 3 

Today is ILmm Sillnvood Aqrl 
NovonlNV 13 

Who is Karen Silkv\ood? 
On this day last year. ISO Taliahasseeans gathered <»n I andis Grc^en to 
commemorate the mysterious death ot Karen Silkwood Silkv\txKi v\ds an employee of 
the Kerr-McGee Nuclear Plant in Oklahoma, whose car was run oft the road as she 
v\ds on her way to deliver confidential and damaging documents about the K-M 
plant. 

— Please come and listen to this unsettling yet impxjrtant storv 

— Join in the commemoration of Karen Silkwood s couiageous lite and death. 

TODAY IN THE UNION COURTYARD 
12 noon to 1 p.m. 

No Nuke €■■¥■! 

Concerned citizens from all over Florida are joining together to oppose the 
transportation of spent nuclear fuel and fuel rods on Florida's highways Most of 
these shipments come from overseas and pass through the Port ot Miami 

Flo Kennedy, black feminist attorney, will speak at the culmination of the Cara\an 
for a non-nuke future which will roll its way through Florida from Turkey Pomt, south 
of Miami, up to Tallahassee. 

The Caravan will be starting Nov 11, and will reach its climax here in Tallahassee 
on Nov. 16 with a rally at Lewis Park at 4:30 p.m. On the agenda is a Ulk by Flo 
Kennedy and music by Shami s No Nuke Band. 

Volunteor Opportunitios Center 

All of us at SCI-Volunteer Opportunities Center would like to thank you for the 
tremendous response we have had to our recent ads and our table in the Union 
Courtyard. Even though we've had great response, htwm/er, we still are in need of 
many more volunteers, in all areas, working with all ages people. 

A special program is being offered through the Volunteer Opportunities Center in 
conjunction with the Department of Corrections. This program is a training program 
geared towards working with adult offenders in alt areas of the rehabilitation 
process. This is an opportunity that you shouldn't pass up if you are at aM interested 
in working with adult offenders. If you are interested, call 644-6410, or come by 
Room 338 Union and ask for Jeff, Debbie, or Lucy. 

IHelp Yourself By Helping Others ! Come to Room 338 to find out how you can gain 
practical experience in your field of study while helping others. Just a few hours of 
your time can make a big difference in the life of* another person. 

Advocotes for D ii d M i d Stiid«rts 

ADS ~ Advocates for Disabled Students — will hold a general membership 
meeting on Monday, Nov. 13, at 7 p.m. in Room 120 Bellamy. ADS is a dub that 
wants to organize and utilize the talents, imagination, awareness, and energy of both 
handicapped and non-handicapped students. We want to help handicapped students 
with problems they may have. Interested people are welcomed to attend. We could 
use your help, 

Wkst it the todoty of liosts? 

Find out about the Hotel-Restaurant School student organization this Monday, 
Nov. 13 at 6:30 p m. in the Statler Room of the Seminole Building. All studenU 
interested in Hotel and Restaurants are invited. 




Rotionol MorijMM 



Vigorously defending the safety 
rights of the American people 



To-ga! To-ga! Togas for Tokers Benefit Party! 
rThe People for RatkNial Marijuana \jsm and a Little Justkie are pleased to 
announce that the First Ex^a-Terrestrial Togas for Tokers Benefit Party will be heki 
on Tuesday night, H&mvher 21 at Tommy's Deep South Music Hall. This will be a 
great opportunity for those of you who intend fb party non-stop from Homecoming 
through Thanksgiving to get out, have a great time, and help The People build the 
Decrim Lobby. Togas are not required, but we hope that everyone will wear 
something apropos. Entertainment will be provkied hi none other than the great 
Tallahassee Band, a new and very hot band called Riff Raff, and an as yet 
undetermined tlurd band. So remember te boogie and toga-out next Tuesday night at 
Tommy's! (No contraband, please!) 

The People will be having a general meeting Thursday night, Nov. 16, at 8:30 in 
room 346 Uroon. On the agenda will be setting the fogistics for the Benefit Party, a 
report from our NORML liaison, reports and plans from our four committees, and 
any and all relevant kieas that the People want to discuss. This is your chance to get 
involved with a viable, productive group that to change Fk)rida's marijuana 
laws this year! 

We wouki like to take thb opportunity to pay tfibute to j udge Galen Hathaway of 
WiMlts, California, jud^ Hathaway, a truly rational man, ruled last mon&i that 
California laws against pot possessMNi are an "unconstttutNNial vkilatkin of the nght 
to privacy. " The good J udge went on to say that legislators had "no factual basis for 
passing laws against manjuana" since there is no oondusive evkience to indicate 
that the herb is harmful. If everyone gets behind The People, Ftorida's lawmakers 
will get the message and become as rjrtional as Judge H^haway! 
ONE GENERATION OF FELONS IS ENOUOi!! 



ir;i 



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4 / Monctey, Homnim 13. 10» FLOiWA RJUmBEAU 



FSU Homecoming festivities begin Thm'sday 



by leslie sahler 



FSU is getting ready for its annual dose of school spirit as 
Homecoming activities get under way this week. 

Those involved in its planning are hopeful this year's 
student-oriented Homecoming will help to strengthen 
flagging unity amoBg students, akuniii, and the Tallahassee 



This is the first year that a student Homecoming 
committee has been organized, plajring a m^sx roie in the 
planning and coordinating of events. 

"Seminole Pride WUI Turn the Tide ' is this year's theme 
as the Seminoles vow to knock the wind out of the sails of the 
U.S. Naval Academy Midshipnea, the highly-tooted team 
firon Aimapolis, Md., 7-2. 

Homecomtng festivities will get under way at 8 p.m. on 
Thorsday, Nov. 16, with a beer bash and free oonntry/fock 
concert in tlw stadinn parking lot. 

The Honeoomtng parade b^lnaat 3 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 
17. Beth Moor, FSCW ahnima (badt when FSU was 
ddnsivd^ a college for woomi), class of 1919, will lead tiie 
parade as marshal from dow nt o wn Tallahassee to the FSU 
tew school area. The parade win feature floats constructed 
by various Gfc^ and independent otgapuzations. 

FSU baseball coach Dkk Howser, former third base coadi 
of Wofld Series Mimphaat Yaakees, will be the guest 
speaker at the Homeooming Banqnet on Friday at 5:45 p.m. 
in the Unlvernty Union. 

Howser recently resigned from the Yankees when offered 
his current position as FSU's head baseball coach. He is an 
FSU alumnus and has made Tatlahaaaee his off-season 
home for the past several years. 

Pow Wow follows at 8 p.m. in Campbell Stadium, with 
studeirt skito. the Flying High Circos, the FSU Marching 
Chiefs, and the announoemest of the Homeooming 



Princess. Chief, and court. 

The new FSU equine mascot. Renegade the horse, will be 
introduced to the crowd. His rider will be dressed in 
authentic Seminole Indian attire. 

The FSU Jazz Ensemble will have the honor of backing up 
Freddie Hubbard, one of this country's foremost jazz 
trumpeters, in a one-hour concert. 

Hubbard seems to be small consolation to the students 
clamoring for the likes of Rita Coolidge and Kris 
Kristoffersoo. Stevie Wonder, or Cbeech and Choi^ all 
performers in FSU's H<Mneooami^ past. 

George Benson and Chicago were among the 
approximately siz ^'names'* cootaded this year, as well as 
Bmt Reynolds to act as master of cer em o ni es. 

Reynoldswastiedup.LPODifeclor Joe Loppeft said, but 
the others preferred not to weather oat a November night m 
the sta^wn. Money wastt'tanisne. lie »id, BorwasMqr by 
the Pow Wow planners. 

In Homecoming Committee m cmb c ff Nancy Baley*s 
opinion, FSU just wasn't lucky enough to nab a **big name" 
passing tfuoagh Tallahassee on ks wtty to s o mewhere else. 
That's the way it happens most of the time, die said. 

Cold weather has plagued both p er fo rmer s and audienoes | 
in recent years, causing problems for both. ^ 

Three years ago. singer Stephen Stills almost refosed to -s 
play to the assembled crowd at CanqibeU becanae of Hie | 
frigid te mp er a tures. | 

The Homecoming Barbeque wiB be held cm Satoiday. 8 
Nov. 18, at 5 p.m. in Tully Gym. 2 

Kick-off for the big game is at 7 p.m. in Campbell 2 
Stadium. The Homecoming Prmoess and Chief will be % 
crowned at half-time. 

According to Phil Barco, director of Student Activities and 
Organizations, it is ezpected to cost b et w ee n S13,000 and 
SiS.OOd to pull off Homeooming in its eirtifety. 




'Savage Sam' on Renegade, 
FSU's new mascat 



Schedule of homecoming events 



TniHBcaitiyf Nov* 1^ 
8 p.m.. Beer bash and free coontiy/tock 
concert sponsored by LPO/IFC. Stadium 
parking lot. 

FkMay, Nov. 17 

10 a.m.. Alumni Registration. Longmire 
Alumni Building. 

11 a.m.. Honor Class (1928) reception. 
President's Home. 

12 noon. Honor Claas/Emerittts Onb 
Lundieim. Longmire Lo ung e, $4.50. 

1 p.m., Initiatfon of Honor Class into 

Emeritus Onb. Longmite Lounge. 

3 p*m.. Homecoming Invade. O^Htol 

BttHding to College of Law. 

5:45 p.m., Homeomiing Dhmer. Qglesby 

Universfty Union, SS.7S. 

5-7 p.m. , School of Nursing Classes of 19S8 

and 1968 Seunion at the home of Dean 

Emilie Henning. 

8:15 p.m.. Opera Performance — **The 
Student Prince'* — Ruby Diamond 
Auditorium, $3.50 and $1.75. 
8 p.m., Pow Wow. Campbell Stadium. $3 
(non-student), and $2 (student). Add $.50 
at the gate. 

Satnrday, Nov. 18 
8:15 a.m.. **Turkey Trot," 15 kilometer 
(two mile) **fun run**. Stadium parking lot. 
J^oitgjfeej^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 



9 a.m.. Alumni registration resumes. 
Longmire Alumni Building; Homeooming 
Breakfast (sponsored by ODK). **Grads 
Made Good** presentations. Qglesby 
University Union. $3.75. 

9-11 a.m.. School of Library Science 
Alumni Association Brunch. Sandels 
Building Lounge. $2. 

11 a.m.. Band Alumni Luncheon and 
Business meeting. Holiday Inn. Apalachee 
Parkway. 

1 1 a.m.. Garnet and Gold Basketball game. 
Tully Gym. 

12 noon. School of Nursing Alumni 
Association **Kickoff for the *Noles** 
Buffet. Holiday Inn downtown. 

2:30 p.m.. Recital, Tallahassee Flute Cub. 
Opperman Music Hall. 
5 p.m.. Homecoming Barbeqae. Tully 
Gym. $4.75. 

7 p.m.. Football game. FSU vs. Navy.- 
Campbell Stadium. $8. 
8:15 p.m.. Opera Performance. "The 
Student Prince.'' Ruby Diamond Auditori- 
um. $3.50 and $1.75. 

10 p.m.. Post Game Alumni Reception. 
Hilton Hotel. 

11 p.m.. Band AHimni Post Game party. 

Spanish Oak^ i luiilnjuse. High Road. 




ConuiiQ 
Loco-Motion Grcus 



In Brief 



i 



THE BIANIAN SUmOfT ASSOCIA- 
TION wffl hold a waSty and match today at 
FAMU startii^ at II a.fli. in front of the 
Technology Buildtng. 

CAKEU DAY for the Social Sciences 
win be held today from 3 to 6 p.m. hi the 
State Room of ^ FSU Union. 

m Sri«f policy: The Flambeau In Brief section, because 
Of ItonHod space, does rot print notices of regular 
i mo t l nos of nrtennbof sh ip groups. Unless pre-rogistratkin 
it rmuired, morning events will be 



day as ttiey occur. Only one notice will be run of eacti 
event, and aft events must be open to ttie public. Notices 

wit! not be taken by telephone, but must be mailed to Tt>e 
Flambeau at FSU Box U-7001 or delivered to tt>e 
Flambeau office at 204 N. Woodward Ave. by l.p.m. tt»e 
day before ttioy are due to run. AH notices should iiKludo 
apy* tliiMf plPoe# cost* if any^ and a contact nufnlMir for 



A^^^fe Si ^ ^ Oil m» 



Weather will be fair through tomorrow 
except for some patches of early mommg 
fog. Highs will be in the upper 70s with 
lows in the mid to upper 40s. Winds will be 
out of the west at 10-15 m.p.h. 



Attractions 

V ^ 

Wkttwn Brat B&td 

phis 

Tom Benjomin 

Thurs. Nov. 16, 8 p.m. 
Union Green 

LPO GffMk- Ciici CiMTt 




Sat. Dec. 9, 8 p.m. 
Ruby Diamond — Free 
Tickets available 238 Union 
Starting Mon. Dec. 4 
$3 non-students 



For foflhor Info coR 644-6710 




r. no.nA r ' MBEAU Monday. November 13, 1978 



SG wants more use of civic center 



by beth ru 

ftowiim mm 

FSU Student leaders want more use of the 
TiBaiMssee-Leon County Civic Colter or tlMir 
moaeyback. all S9.7 million. 

But Board of Regents officials disagree wMi 
tiie ftodeatf * contention that tliey lunre t logal 
l,isb to reclaim the funds. 

FSU ftsdeat body President Neal Friedmao 
aid MM ftoai d eat Raady Drew argued their 
pjflit at a fMeaa oosfafettoe tbey calied at tiw 
CapMThmdoy. 

A stodeat iae reaoliitloii fiaaaed by the 1978 
Florida l^ialatiife reqnkea prior atodeat 
govenuneat approval of any ooat r ac t eateied 
iato by tlie Board of Regoita oaiag atadeat 
baOdiag tea. Attbough the civic oeater 
agreeaieat waa algaed by the dty, coaaty. 
Regents aad FSU hi 1976, before the law took 
effect, reoeat c haagea ia the oeaier have 
created a aew oootiact raqahii^ theiri^iproval, 
the atadeata c oatead . 

**it'a aot at aO what waa |4aiBied bach tfaea," 
siid Drew. **lt*a aa csatiid^ dlHereat ooaoepl." 

Ptagaed by coa atm c ti oB ddaya aad ooat 
ovemins, the price of baHdiag the ceater has 
risea Ipobi $24 to $33.2 laillion, whBe a 
2,20(>-aeat aaditoriom aad a 1,000-car paridag 
garage have beea cut. 

The aoditorloBi was FSU's auda ii^eieat la 
the structare. Drew said, aad Ita eKmlnatioB 
has nude ^ke project naattractive as a stadeat 
investmeat. 

"The poaltloa of tiie Board is that ^ (SG) 



•f 



impose this rale oa 
coatracts made prevloasly,** reapoaded 
Hendrix Chandler. BOB oorpo 

**k wiy affect baiidiilg to the IhtBM. 

Aay rhaagri at this dato 
carrent constractioa coatracts, he said. 
Chaadier did aot object to the reqaeat far 



"The Board waato to get the 
aaadicr of days th^ caa tagait 
aatoftids,"hesakL 

Stad eat leaders at tfw preaa 
they felt FSU had 

" We wffl oaly get to 900 
baakethai 27 days oat of m," 
Friedouui added he bdieved 
woawa's teaatt shoidd be able to 
every day tiw 



aaid 

r said, 
's aad 
ere 
far 



as late as 2 a.ai. at FSU's TaBy Gym, Friediaaa 
said. becMse It It ton umill to hold both vuskv 

Stadeals have had ao say to tlie revisioBs 
aMioogfi their aiooey is behig speat oa dvic 
ceater ooastiiMtioa, Friedauu oomfrtataed, bat 
added he did not coatact BM about the 




Neal Friedman 

piedgedtothecivicceBter iffltfl I960, Friedaiaa 



**! feel we've boea locked oat from the v^ 
beginning,*' he said. 

SG Vice Presideat Vtvimi Bhfera said the lack 
of a faffge auditorium was oae of the reaamis 
FSU couldn't get a "name group" to play at 
this year's Homecoming. F^ cannot build its 
own auditoriura aow, as building fees mre 



Three of the faur parties to the ooatract have 
i^pproved the o oat r act reviskms — the dty, 
county «id state. The BOB has aot fanaafly 
accepted the changes, but has aioved to okay 
them. 

County Cemmissioa Chairpersoa Doug 
Nichols protested the oooaty's approval of the 
facility cuts, but was oatvoied by other coaaty 
commissioners. 




JACKS0MVIt.U •0«-7a«^12 



CLAtiltiMfNNOVil 




CPA 
REVIEW 



aAKERAUTO 
PARTS 

Student Discounts 
20B North Adama 
224*7161 



Flo Kennedy will be key speaker 
for week of anti-nuclear events 



from ataff reporta 

An appearance by leading feminist and 

civil rights activist Flo Kennedy highlights 
a week of activities planned by local 
citizens against the proliferation of nuclear 
power. The events are part of national 

Silkwood Week, in commemoration of the 
mysterious death of former laboratory 
worker Karen Silkwood. 

Silkwood was killed in late 1974 while 
investigating alleged improprieties at a 
nuclear power plant in Oklahoma. As 
reported in Rolling Stone, at the time of her 
death. Silkwood was on her way to give a 
New York Times reporter documents 
allegedly incriminating to the Kerr-McGee 
plutonium plant in Cresent. Okla. 

Silkwood was found dead in her car, 
which had struck a tree, and the documents 
were never found. Reporters at the scene 
of the accident said there was evidence that 
Silkwcx)d's car was forced off the road, 
although no official investigation was ever 
conducted. 

One week before her death, Silkwood's 
apartment was contaminated with 
plutonium. An Atomic Energy Commission 
report failed to determine if the poisoning 
was deliberate. 

Flo Kennedy, founder of the Feminist 
party, attorney, and author of several 
books including The Patholog\ of the 
Oppressed, w ill speak Wednesday at noon 
in Moore Auditorium. Kennedy, an 
exuberant and outspoken lecturer, has 
been an activist in ihe areas of civil rights, 
the anti-war movement and consumer 
issues. She will speak at FSU, and at 





Flo Kennedy 



FAMU's Lee Hall at 3 p.m., about human 
rights. 

Members of Tallahassee's Catfish 
Alliance wiO soonsor an informal talk at 
noon today in the Union Courtyard. 

On lliursday, the Caravan Fbr a Non- 
Nuclear Future will arrive in TaBahassee 
after a statewide tour hi oppositioo to 
nuclear power. 

Silkwood We^ will cuhniaate on 
Thursday, at down town Lewis Park. Flo 
Kennedy will be the keynote speaker. Also 
speaking will be representatives of the 
Department of EavhfoaaieBtal Regahite, 
die Nudear Cargo Task Force, and the 
National Organization of Women. Music 
win be provided by Shami*s No Nuke Band. 

Local attorney Kent Spriggs wffl emcee 
the rally, aad a covered dish dmaer wIR 
follow at the First Presbyterian Church on 
North Adama teeet. 



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FSU stodeot body Pireskleiit Neal Friedman, student 
MBito Plesideot Saiufy Dfew and odier repcesoi^^ 
the students at Florida State Univer^ held a ptess 

conference last week to annoonoe their displeasure at the 
short shrift students are getting with the Tallahassee- 
Leon County Civic Center. 

It seems in all the brouhaha and shuffling ova: what is 
and is not to be inciaded m the civic center, die stodents 
haven't been consulted, altliough $9.7 million in FSU 
student fees is going into construction of the place. 

Friedman, Drew and company, then, are rightfully 
perturbed by the oversight. After all, wasn't a major 
piKpose of the center to benefit the local universities? 

Nix one auditorium, the biggest plus for studoits, and 
axe one parking garage, the only thing that could have 
saved the already dismal FSU parking problem from 
worsening once the civic center opens for business. Now 
the Civic Center Authority declares the two were never 
even genuine considerations for construction, after selling 
FSU a bill of goods tiiat suggested som^ing else 
attogether: the auditorium and parking ded^ were just a 
couple of dreams, they say. 

And never mind what the students think. 

Well, we hope the studentrcan give the Civic Center 
Authority something to think about now. 

The student officials say they will attempt to retrieve 
their money unless a few minor conditions are met to make 
the skeleton of a center still left in the planning a place for 
students too. 

Although the leverage with which the students seek to 
hold some suray appears tenuous, we sincerely hope it is 
enough to at least get somebody to begm cmsidering tht 

students' concerns. 

As it now stands, about all FSU will get out of the civic 
center is a place to play home basketball games; not 
practice, not work out in on a regular basis, but merely 
play home games. The old Tully Gym courts won't even be 
freed for student intramurals (something the student 
leaders are demanding). 

What tripe! The students also want some assurances 
that money will be found and set aside for construction of a 
new auditcmum at FSU similar to the one axed from the 
civic center pUm. 

Friedman, Drew, et al say the civic center contract as 
amended, doing away with the auditorium and parking 
deck, constitutes a new contract that must be resigned 
before it is valid. They say they will refuse to sign it, and 
take the matter to court if necessary until the students get 

more ooosUeraticm in the {rianning and operation of the 
center. 
We say right on! 



Horida Flambeau Foundation Inc. business and advertising office 206 N. 
Woodward Avenue, phone 644-4075; Newsroom 204 N. Woodward Avenue, 
phone 644-5505; Production/Mediatype lab 314 University Union, phone 
644-5744; Classified ad office 306 Univefsity Union, phofw Miffng 
■ddraM. P.O. BOK U-7001, Roridi SM Unhmity, T ila ham a , Florida. 

Steve Watkins Editor 

Beth Rudowske News Editor 

Sidney Bedingfield Sports Editor 

Daaoi Vogt Assistant News Editor 

KoiLewniidoaki Arts /Features Editor 



Caravan na-nukes the coast 



Guest Column 



**DuMi k. Mm, die kst 
^bmg I wanted to do was 
get hooked hito the 



tired. It'd be nice to k^^ 
beck and efljoy hie fo a 
while." Indy is nsay 
tUags. She worified hmg 

nd hard in the stniMi^ 
cM fights, the nAmn 

She's a nmher who ieds 
she mdljr luisn't iMd 
emm^ tiflK to devole to 



lie, too. Fni wom. oot 
haif tiie time, not qaHe 
knowing where to put what 
eneigy I have left. My 
sistets mud brothers, Judy, 
Barry, Debbie, Tana, Pat, 
and Larry, to name a few in 
the Catfish Alliance, put up 
with me, sustain me. I 
guess that's how we keep 
on keepin* on. 

So, it's off we go, **The 
Caravan for a Non-Nuclear 
Future" is a reality. We'll 
be travelling up the 
Atlantic coast, from Turkey 
Point, site of two of 
Florida Power's nukes, to 
Jacksonville; then to Talla- 
hassee. Along the way we'll 
participate in community 
meetings, showing films 
and answering questions, 
and have a debate or two 
with representatives of the 
nuclear industry. On Thurs- 
day, November 16, the 
Caravan will arriye in 
Tallahassee, joining, with 
our friends at Myersj Park. 
We'll leave at aro^ind 3 
p.m. for a short hike to 
Lewis Park. That's down- 
town, between Park Ave- 
nues, just east of the phone 
company building. It'll be 
part education, part celebra- 
tion. 

Flo Kennedy will be 
the featured speaker. If 
you've never heard her, 
you're in for a special treat. 
She's quite a woman, and 
rarely will you see a sacred 
cow without her footprint in- 
delibly etched on its 
hindquarters. Not incident- 
ly, she'll let you in on a 
little of the economics of 
nuclear power. 

But why the caravan? 
Well, one of the more 
dangerous aspects of the 
whole nuclear fuel cycle is 
the transportation of the 
waste, spent fuel from a 
nuclear reactor. You may 
know that Carter, in an 
effort to avoid proliferation 
of nuclear weapons, de- 
creed that all fuel sold by 
the U.S. to foreign users 



had to be retvmed to this 
ooeatry for fcpio cr s stBg. 
Soflie of diat spent §md 
cones in tliroogh the poft 
of hfiaai. From diere it is 
trassorted, maialy by 
track, K95 to storage 
depots in 
The 



by the Hmdkm 
Regttlati^ Conoiisaiiw 



What woidd amy drrv« 
do if there were lo be la 
accideni that "breeched 
cooiainroent*"* Well, one 
cotthi cati Orlando. HIS 
has a specially Cfidpped 
vehicle to wmmitm snch 
spiib and. we are assmd. 
it cotthi reach ny poiM OQ 
die t rana pot iad on route ia 
abont two honn. That's all 
wei and good. Att nndear 
waste has a habit of 
dispersing itself . there b 
wind, or mh, neidwr of 




(NRC). Do n<^ be reassured 
however, since the casks 
need not undergo actual 
field tests. On March 7, 
1978, at the Goodyear 
Portsmouth Gaseous Diffu- 
sion Plant near Pikestown, 
Ohio, a 14 ton cask was 
dropped twenty Inches, and 
cracked! Forty six workers 
were contaminated. 

Recently Ben Warren of 
HRS assured us in a letter 
to this newspaper that 
when it was discovered that 
an "unqualified" driver 
was scheduled to haul a 
load of waste, that the 
shipment was held up until 
a qualified driver could be 
found. Elsewhere in that 
letter he assailed The 
Flambeau for "mislead- 
ing" editorial comment. 
Since 1 had never heard of 
special training in the 
handling of nuclear mate- 
rials being required for 
such drivers, 1 called Mr. 
Warren to ask for clarifica- 
tion. He told me that the 
schedule driver was not yet 
18 years of age. In other 
words the driver could not 
have possessed a chauffer's 
licence, and could not have 
legally driven a load of 
chicken feathers for the 
same trucking fmn. 



which is nncoaiinon to 
Florida, much of the spill 
could already be on the way 
to your dinner ti^le, via the 
food chain. 

Daring a recent four year 
period, 144 accidents. 38 
involving releases of radia- 
tion, were reported, h 
September, 1977, a tractor- 
trailer swerved to avoid 
colliding with another 
vehicle. Ten thousaod 
pounds of *'yellow cake," 
refined oraninm ore, were 
spilled in the Colorado 
countryside. Goverameot 
agencies at the local, sute, 
and federal level argued 
over responsibility as 
nature took its coarse. 
THREE DAYS LATER, 
clean-up begins! Right 
now nukes only supply 
about 8 percent of til 
electrical power. Natioo- 
wide we have 35 percent 
excess capacity, while the 
Department of Energy 
recommends a 20 perceflt 
surplus. Based on those 
figures, we could shut 
down the nukes tonight 
with no ill effects, b 
addition countries such as 
Sweden and West Germsny 
get by on about one-Wf 
energy use per person as do 
we. 




ett€ 



Work; 
relati 



Since we arc 
watching the 
trying to dog us| 
go in Moore Ai 
What worksho] 
between facultv] 

It \s trulv a I 
number of bro 
"Greek Stomp, 
objectives for b< 
a quality educai 
There Is not a 

At a pre V toil : 
statemeni was 
prevent us tr« 
operative. " T* 
however, tht \ 
or institutit»naiij 
detect. K.ii isf 
(debatable) an( 
instilutionali/f 

Unfortunate!' 
statistics boini 
students. F»)r c- 
flunk out or kaj 
derivative o\ th< 
of four student! 
Consequently . t| 
non black roit i 
freshmen lev c 
and unencuura] 
Hopefully we c a] 
we get off our a 
from 12:30 2:3( 
because you ha' 
check it out. 

Lockr 

Editor: 

I belie vr wh« 
that person shoi 
of Park Loi 
such recogni 
teams over thr 
one that trams 
There's no d»)i 
coach, and sina 
Park has develol 
best conditiont- 

From what 1' 
Coach Lockrov*. 
that should ecil 
asked. I think t1 
job Park foik 
encourage all i ' 
least one of ti 
upcoming year 





Workshop to improve 
relations noon today 

Editor: 

Since we are probably sitting in the Union on our asses, 
watching the freaks, talking about how **swines*' are 
trying to dog us, or just simply hanging-out, why don't we 
go in Moore Auditorium at 12:30 today to the workshop. 
What workshop? The workshop to impcove lelatioiis 
between faculty and students. 

It is truly amazing when one takes into acoount the 
number of brothers and sisters that crowd around a 
"Greek Stomp," which is kool; but when we prioritize our 
objectives for being at FSU, the concensus should be to get 
a quality education. Are we getting what we have paid for? 
There is not a stomp today but there is a workriiop. 

At a previous BSU (Black Student Union) meetmg, tlie 
statement was made, '*the same forces that tited to 
prevent us from being here 10 or 15 years ago ate still 
operative/' To reiterate, those forces are still in existence, 
however, they are more lethal. Why? They are disguised 
or institutionalized, which makes them more difficuh to 
detect. Racists have reduced their overt activity 
(debatable) and are waUering in the hog heaven oi 
institutionalized racism. 

Unfortunately, there are some myths or incorrect 
statistics being distributed to young and unknowing 
students. For example, one out of four minority students 
flunk out or leave every academic year. This statistic is a 
derivative of the Massic report. The report stated one out 
of four students from junior colleges are not retained. 
Consequently, there is Uttte difference between black and 
non -black retention rates for students entering at the 
freshmen level. Myths or statistics can often be misleading 
and unencouraging to many young brothers and sisters. 
Hopefully we can shed some light on the dim situation, if 
we get off our asses and come in Moore Auditorium today, 
from 12:30-2:30. If you can't stay as long as you want 
because you have a class, or some other veawms, at least 
check it out. 



Lockrow has a fan 

Editor: 

I believe when someone is doing an outstanding job, 
that person should be given some recognition. In the case 
of Park Lockrow, coach of the FSU women's tennis team, 
such recognition is long overdue. I have seen many tennis 
teams over the past coof^ of years, and never have I seen 
one that trains harder or as consistently as the FSU team. 
There's no doubt that a team reflects the ability of it's 
coach, and since taking over the coaching spot last year. 
Park has developed his team into what I'm sure will be the 
best conditioned women's squad in the collegiate ranks. 

From what I've seen so far this year as compared to last. 
Coach Lockrow has put together a greatly improved team 
that should eclipse last year's record with no questons 
asked. 1 think the students here at FSU can be proud of the 
job Park Lockrow and his team have been doing, and 
encourage all tennis enthusiasts to make an effort to see at 
least one erf tl matches played on campus during the 
upcoming year. 



The 



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Piltl ftpsww* FSU OoniOf 



Ibnight^s the mgfst 

Far You: 

A free Seminole T-SNrt like the one shown above. You can pick one up on Monday nights afler 
5 p.m. when you buy any me<«um or large SuperStyle pizza (One T-Shirt per medium or large 
SuperStyie purchased). Offer is good now though December 4th. 1978 at the four Pizza KM 
restaurants in Tallahassee. 

For FSU: 

Pizza Hut will donate 25i to the Florida State University Athletic Assodation for each medium or 

large SuperStyle pizza sold on Monday nights during the promotion period. (Four Pizza Hut 
restaurants in Gainesville will also be making a donation to the University of Florida Athletic 
Association based on this same method.) The total donation to each University will be announced 
December 8th. 

New SuperStyle Flzsa 

The name says it all. Now when you choose your favorite pizza 
combination, just say "SuperStyle." Savor a pizza that's piled high 
with extra cheese and the toppings you Mce best. More tasty than 
any pizza you've tried. And more for the money too. Let yoi«rself go 
. . . SuperStyle. 



Four TallaliasMe locatioffis: 

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Pyramids 



* Go to the tenk aatf twy two Series E Savings Bonds 
Have ifeM liocli Mde oM as gifts to tfK pcfM wIm 

appeals as wmmkfx me m fcm oeWfy typed 
T<i«Btkertlie two bonds wii cost to S3730. Added to 
originai pajmMt of 137^, tiiat a^Ks S7S yon 



^ Go iMMBe and attack eadi savings bond to one of your 

lists and one of yonr 
Baking two new padkets Wke the 
yon orginally bonglit front yonr friend. S^ tlie pnckiets to 
two other friends for S37.50 apiece, BUT DO NOT SEND 
THEM THBOUOH THE MAOS UNTCB ANY 
CfBCUMSTANCE. 

• Congiatnlations. Ton have jnst snooessfnDy evaded 
U,S. mail frand laws which nust pyramid or chahi letter 
schemes violate; you have already reoooped your $75 
investment; and yon have oidy to sit bach and wait while 
yonr name roOs, slowly, upward on the other investors' 
lists. When it begins hitting the mimber one dots, baby, 
Chech yonr maffiNs. S50,000 in $2S incremenu is a hen of a 

lotofmafl. 

One mere thing: Bom die evidence.This whole shebang 
is as IBegal in Florida as casino gambling on the gold 
coast. Legal logic considers all pyramiding or 
chain4etteriag operations a form of loC^y. It's not an 
easycrhnetDprosecvte, and m spite of aS the pubficftyu 
seldom pfosecnted; bnt it's sttt a misdemeanor of the first 
d^ree. That OMans it's pnnisliable by op to one year in 

Even if you're not prosecuted, yon may be embarrassed 
if you go to a local bank and try to pnrdiase two $25 gift 
bonds made out to the same person. BaidDers here became 
aware of the scheme two months ago when some dense 
fellow bought two bonds at hidusttial National bank, then 
asked a bank official if he oould use the bank's duplicatii^ 
madung to make copies of the chata-letter instructions. 
The bank officer, unfortunately not dense, notified the 
bank's l^al p er sonnel . 

From there the matter was handed to the Federal 
Beserve Bank in Jacksonvffle, where another version of 
the same letter had just been passed around as rapi<fly as a 
new variety of V.D. Officials there had a ready response. 

**The US, Treasury," according to one Federal Reserve 
official {wHo also refused to give his name) said, "has 
authorized banks to refuse to sefl bonds to persons whom 
bank personnel deem suspicious, where there is reason to 
believe the bonds will be used in a chain-letter scheme.** 

The niRcM reiterated a point made by vktually 
everyone- who examines the scheme — even those who 
buy into It: the person at the top reaps all the profits. In 
fact, acconfing to wire service r^orts, the Justice 
Department has begun to investigate one sodi pyramid in 
the behef that a bulk of the names initially circulated were 
pseudonyms for the three original perpetrators of the 
letter. 

The Treasury Department is worrieif about the scheme 
for another reason: its participants usually cash in their 
bonds right away. 

*That/' said the Reserve BaidL official,'* is not gonna* 
help us at all. Those people are doing a disservice to the 
Savings Bond Program. It just mates paperwcxrk for 
everybody." 

Some of the people who've begun to cash in cm their 
investment in Tafiahassee, where bonds reportedly have 
been appearing in the mailbox as eariy as a week after sale 
of the two packets, might think any amount of paperwork 
is worth it, though. 

Such must have been the case for one young man, who 
was questioned at the bank by a steely-eyed teller. 
Although some tellers ignored the directives of their 
superiors and won*t question anyone about the purchase 
of bonds, this one looked at her customer with a prolring 
glare and inquired suspiciously, **Are these bonds for that 
chain letter that's been going around Tallahassee:** 

•'Why, no, ma'am,*' replied the youth. **!'m just so 
pleased with President Carter and the things he's doing! I 
just want to buy some Savings Bonds to help support the 
economy." 




3 



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It laiKS only a few minutes 
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can do for yoursdf is as 
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hai^nness. 

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U.S. w 

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ftaiiiaiii «|«l|wn^ 

DOT Spiegel maga 
sioieo fxom U.S. at 
sottdpvest Gcrmanv f 
terroffiit WdwMits m 
aitaelES In FrMce. H< 

Frencii iMttceiii 
'Cailoi" was part o 
eflilMMgr la "The 
mtborities later foui 

paiweeB 1971 i 
K mliwitoa tcni pnv a 
anti XBMk missiles, r. 
I^a^ic explosive dis 
dqMits at Miesau an^ 
equip an entire batt. 

TiK M26 is a fragi 
lata tlioasaads erf pio 

KeiMdas of such 
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Sooie gfeaadea wi 
WIesbatai* where 
ciltoaa Leyla Bocool 
20 haadgiins. 



Casket 
St. John 

CAIRO. Egypt ( 
reported ttxiay he 
contain^ the rem; 
who christened K 
orders of King Her 

The laporter for 
at an ancleot Chris 
desert. 

He said he was t 
an old church in \\ 
building built by k 
360. The aioiiaster> 
60 miles northwt \' 

If the body is 
discovery could ran 
and Al Ahram u 
ascertain its auther 

According to th 
Church, the body < 
Palestine to the M 
Sth oeatury A.D.. 

It was taken to t 
fiiddaa theie becau 
persecatkm at the 

The reporter sa 
monastery and we 
the cdlBa purporte 

Al Alaam pubH 
oorrespoadeat said 
the body of John t 
BKmastery were 




ili 



« SINKS. 

m-mt 

m w 




.S. weapons 
used by terrorists 

g()NN. West Germany (UPI) — Hand grenades stolen 
tr m I S. arms depots in West Germany have become 
standard equipment for international terrorist groups, a 
Wcsi German magazine reported yesterday. 

Dt r Spiegel magazine said 54 of 75 M26 hand grenades 
stolen from U.S. arms depots in the Miesau area of 
M)U!h\^est Germany from 1971 to 1974 have been found in 
(crri rist hideouts in West Germany and at the scene of 
attacks in France, Holland and Sweden. 

French intelligence officials say leading world terrorist 
•'Carlos ' was part of a group that attacked the French 
embassy in The Hague, Netheriands in 1974, where 
authorities later found remains of four M26 grenades, 
Spiegel said. 

B 'ween 1971 and 1974, as one police officer in 
Kaiscrslauiern privately admitted, *so many' grenades, 
anti tank missiles, rounds of ammunition and pounds of 
plastic explosive disappeared from the giant U.S. arms 
depots at Miesau and Weilerbach that 'you could almost 
equip an entire battalion with it.' " Spiegel said. 

The M26 is a fragmentation hand grenade that shatters 
into thousands of pieces of shrapnel when exploded. 

Remains of such grenades lay scattered at the West 
German embassy in Stockholm after it was occupied by 
BaaderMeinhof terrorists in 1975, Spiegal reported. 

Some grenades were found in a recent arms raid in 
Wiesbaden, where police arrested American -Turkish 
citizen Leyla Bocook, 25, after finding two submachine 
guns, 20 handguns, 66 pounds of explosives and several 
thousand rounds of ammimitioii. 

Casket may contain 
St. John the Baptist 

CAIRO. Egypt (UPI) — An Egyptian newspaperman 
reported today he saw a coffin that monks told him 
contained the remains of St. John the Baptist, the man 
who christened Jesus Christ and was beheaded at the 
orders of King Herod Antipas. 

The reporter for Al Ahram said he was shown the coffin 
at an ancient Christian monastery in Egypt's western 
desert. 

He said he was told the body was found in a cave below 
an old church in the St. Makar monastery, a fortress-like 
building built by Egypt's Orthodox Coptic Church in A.D. 
360. The monastery is located in the Natroun Valley, about 
60 miles northwest of Cairo. 

If the body is really that of John the Baptist, the 
discovery could rank among the most important of all time, 
and Af Ahram urged scholars and Egyptologists to 
ascertain its authenticity. 

According to the tradition of the Coptic Orthodox 
Church, the body of John the Baptist was removed from 
Palestine to the Mediterranean city of Alexandria in the 
Sih century A.D^ 

It was taken to the monastery in the 11th century and 
hidden there because the Christians of ^gypt were facing 
persecution at the time, tradition says. 

The reporter said he was taken by monks to the 
monastery and went down the cave where he was shown 
the coffin purportedly contaning the John's remains. 

Al Ahram published a picture of the coffm, but the 
correspondent said^he could not vouch that it was really 
the body of John the Baptist. But he said monks at the 
monastery were confident that it is. 



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Bedlam 

r/?e Pi Beta Phi's Heft) 
were edged out by the 
first ptace team. Phi kki, 
in fiiik K v 's Bad Rnoa. 




Bed race raises money for charity 



by dwto boduiMMi 

liwt Fndsy, die wvinai of FSU's Pitt Mn loiiif^ 
tbeiBselves faster wicb a naa in bed tkan their Giedc 
sistefs, aad ffacy ifid it to the pjffcttig lot of OunphcH 
StadmiD. 

The Phi Ma's poshed their "suitress maa" os a rotting 
bed orer the fiaish fine ahead of fbe Pi Beta Phi's entry to 
daim a first place trophy and the coagratalatioBS of the 
croird of several hradved hi the Paah^eiric Associatioa's 
first aaaoa] Bed Kace lor Mosodar Distrophy. 

Pie Phi Ma teani of Cayle Borfchart, Afioe Korasy, Lori 
Bennett, and EBen Boche, supplied the power, tidking 
nattiess nuui M&e Overtos for a ride. 

The Pf Beta Phi bed, jockeyed by Danqr Smith, was 

Union will ask 
for salary \^ 

by Howard libin 

ftambMw staff virrrter 

The United Faculty of Florida will ask 
the Board of Regents to increase salaries 
and fringe benefits, when the two parties 
square off in this year's contract 
negotiations early next month. 

**We have decided to attempt to set new 
guidelines for the salary structure," said 
Jim Birchfield, FSU representative to the 
statewide bargaining committee. "Right 
now there are many university empk^ees 
who are not included.*' 

The salary structure which was created 
by last year's contract sets minimum 
salaries for faculty members, but excludes 
many university employees, such as 
librarians and counselors. 

Union officials also plan to ask the board 
for pay hikes, but are not sure of the 
amount of their request. 

"We're going to look at some budgeting 
and make a reasonable request to the 
board," said Harold Fletcher, president of 
the FSU-UFF. "How much we ask for will 
depend on the outcome of future 
research." 

The union is also going to ask the board 
to change some regulations involving 
faculty retirement plans, the number one 
priority being reducing the ten year vesting 
requirement. 

"As it is now a faculty member must be 
ai FSU for ten years before he can qualify 
for any part of his pension," said Daniel 
Eisenberg, former FSU-UFF president. 
"This is not the way it is done at other 
universities and needs to be reduced. " 

Other proposed union requests will be to 
increase health and life insurance benefits 
and to eliminate differences between 



propdied by Beth Bostkfc, Babs McLeOan, and sisters 
and Wendy Reffram. 



PanheFlenic Association Vice-President Barbie Nelson 
said the event was 'definitely a success and will be 
planned again next year. We had an excellent turnout and 
the Panhellenic Association really af^eciates the support 
the student body gave as 




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The bed race alone raised an estimated Sl,700 for the 
Mm»lar Distrophy Assodatioo, whfle the food and game 
booths, also sponsored by the Panhellemc Assodatkm 
daringh the afternoon extravaganza, raised an undisclosed 
amount for United Way. Most of the money coflected was 
donated by local merchants who sponsored the beds the 
various sororities. 




: SATURDAY 




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employees who work on the academic 
contract basis (9 months) and full-time (12 
months) basis. 

Negotiations between the board and 
UFF have historically been protracted over 
several months. However, union officials 
are confident a^greement can be reached 
sooner this year. 

"We have talked to the board 
representatives about what we want, and 
they agree on many points,** ^id Giiford 
Hale, chairman of the UFF fringe benefit 
committee. "We have a better chance of 
getting our request this year.** 

Several union officials said they felt the 
legislature would be more sympathetic this 
year, as one of their "most ardent 
opponents** Rep. Ed Fortune, D*Pace, was 
not re-elected. 

BOR negotiator Caesar Naples, 
contacted at his home Sunday, refused 
comment or the union's bargaining 
package. 



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Sou 




like one 
fifties. Souii 
concern is to 
perform 
House." ? 
and shout the 
are out jukin 
snappin' tht-i! 
from the raft< 
swing of the 

Now thoug 
hfce the Drift 
relegated to t 
Redding are 
conscious an(' 

Did the grt 
and blues vanij 
Christ without 
Springstetr 

What your 
flip flop an ! 
white, ar! ! 

South M 
Graham Far] 
chameleons t( 
them are dan^ 
Southsidc i 
job shakin th; 
we all like Spj 
places in A \ 
Mai Weinb( r 
. . .well Soul* 
And when » 
the rafters ar 
On Hearts < 
much rafter n 
roadhouse. ai l 
witfi occasion 
Stone is the n 
for the group 
on teee fh)r| 
midnight stre« 
that both the 
years. 

As with S) 
images, char 
"Better Way 
Weinber 
beat, pacing t 
and Billy Ru 
**Baby*s Cioi i 
number that 

The three s| 
*'Talh to Me 
rather solid r* 
yet they are t 



Zapp 



(ZNS) Rock] 
be known for 
stop him tr«»tT| 
during a rccc 

When som< 
perform inij inl 
house lights 
audience to i 

The police ij 
taken awa\ 
were dimiuc 



-I 




Southside churns out more roadhouse melodrama 



by Steve doNar 

HambMu staff writer 

Like one of those great black vocal groups of the late 
fifties. Southside Johnny and his Asbury Jukes main 
concern is to keep the beat going. Listening to the band 
perform, one recalls a scene like the one in "Animal 
House." where Otis Day and the Knights, bop, doo-wop 
and shout the hits in a by-the-wayside roadhouse. Couples 
are out jukin' on the dance floor, the single guys are 
snappin' their fmgers and the real partiers are hanging 
from the rafters, everyone caught up in the irreversible 
swing of the music. 

Now though, scenes like that aren't so common. Greats 
like the Drifters or the Coasters have long since been 
relegated to the Big Daddy's circuit, Sam Cooke and Otis 
Redding are dead and Jackie Wilson languishes semi- 
conscious and paralyzed in a hospital bed. 

Did the great soul-swing singer, the master of rhythm 
and blues vanish beneath flaming aircraft wreckage, like a 
Christ without a Paul, a Dylan without a Springsteen, a 
Springsteen minus a Southside Johnny? 

Morp orj^ss, yes. 

What your fifties-sixties soul legend has done is a 
flip/flop and like a chameleon changed from black to 
white, and moved to a safer location. 

Southside Johnny is one of those chameleons. J. Geils, 
Graham Parker, Van Morrison, Springsteen are 
chameleons too. in one way or another. Only a couple of 
them are damn original chameleons. 

Southside Johnny isn't though he does a good enough 
job shakin' that he satisfies us anyway. Plus the fact that 
we all like Springsteen, and they both played the same 
places in Asbury Park, and Steve Van Zandt and 
Max Weinberg from Springsteen's band are Asbury Jukes 
. . .well Southside is good on his own too. 

And when he and his band are really good, they can fill 
the rafters and damn near tear the playhouse down. 

On Hearts of Stone, their third album, there isn't too 
much rafter music, but you still have the image of the 
roadhouse, and flawless, pop-styled soul ballads balanced 
with occasionally rousing, celebratory rockers. Hearts of 
Stone is the most cohesive, best produced album to date 
for the group. The songs, written by Van Zandt with help 
on three from Springsteen, reflect the same lonely 
midnight streets, the Romeos and the trapped situations 
that both the Boss and Southside have sung about for 
years. 

As with Springsteen, the best songs recall cinematic 
images, characters east of Eden, hell-or-highway bound. 
'Better Way Home." the opener on side one, kicks off 
with Weinberg's drums, a steady, relentless. Watts-like 
beat, pacing the rhythm punctuated by tight, exact horns 
and Billy Rush's stinging guitar. From this we go to 
'Baby's Gone for Good," a pleading, down-tempo 
number that sounds like it came straight from E Street. 

The three Springsteen songs here, "Hearts of Stone,' 
"Talk to Me," and ''Trapped Again," come across as 
rather solid rejects from Darkness on tlie Edge off Towo, 
yet they are taUor-nuwle for the Jukes. 



Zappa calk the law 

iWS) Rock con^wser asd ptfformcr Frank Zappa may 
be known for his anti-cstoWidimciit views, but that didn t 
stop him from calling the cops when he ran into trouble 
during a lecent concert. 

When someone hurled a whiskey bottle at him while 
performing in Augnsto. Maine, Zappa demanded that the 
house lights be turned up, and tiien asked witnesses m tne 
audience to point out the culprit. 

The police promptly arrested a 23.year^ld man^ ho was 
taken away and charged with reckless c^<*"ff^^ 
were dimmed and Zappa went on wiA Hie snow. 



The title cut is the classic story of the losing lover, as 
Southside tells his girl in near -copy of Springsteen's vocal 
tones: "Can't talk now. I'm not alone/so put your ear close 
to the phone/this is the last dance/the last chance for r 
hearts of stone." ' 

Romance and cinema, sure, and also melodramatic 
mush. But the boys pull it off. In fact they pull it off several 
times so that, while it all sounds nice and soulful and as 
Griel Marcus might say "reflects the spirit of collective 
American street experience." it gets a little bit . . .ahh. . . 
boring. After hearing nine songs that sound basically the 
same, with two or three predictably intense and necessarily 



r 

mediaty 


pe 


1 Rnn. 314 University Union 644-5744 
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pain-filled guitar solos — there's a great one on **Take it 
Inside" — you can find yourself soothed, relaied tNt^T 

You might even want to play it again. 

If 1 want to hear the great soul voice ot the seventies 
though. I'll just put on Street Choir." But 1 still wouldn't 
mis^ Southside if he played near any roadside 1 was 
driving on. 



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12 ' Monday November n ^^978 plOP^DA Pi^^^o^^AU 



Blue-collar workers 
tell their own story 



Cabbie verse 



— AMMJLMIA 



SAN FRANCISCO — This city, which 
has helped nurture such writers as Mark 
Twain. Frank Norris, Dashiell Hammett, 
William Saroyan, Jack London. Lawrence 
Ferlinghetti and many more, is now giving 
rise to both a new groi^ of writers and a 
new kind of writing 

Some call it the iUtritiufe of work," 
and for two good reasons: It is written, for 
the most part, by blue-collar workers, cab 
drivers and dock workers, and it depicts 
the special worlds defined by such work. 

One of the most successful examples of 
this fledgling genre is a literary magazine 
called The Deep City Press, written, edited 
and published by cab drivers for cab 
drivers. !t is one of several experiments 
here and in Los Angeles that might be 
forging an important new direction in 
contemporary writing. 

Until now, workers' literature — a term 
the writers might scoff at — usually 
languished in a dresser drawer, according 
to George Benet. a longshoreman poet and 
novelist, because there seemed to be no 
audience. 

"The big magazines and publishers 
wanted something more glamorous. And 
the little non -commercial publications 
leaned towards the avante garde or the 
academic.** 

The Deep City Press however, revealed 
that people writing about their work could 
find an audience in the men and women 
who shared their occupation. Ralph 
Hofischildt, editor and publisher of the 
magazine, proved that this sort of 
publishing could be done without a great 
deal of capital or fancy equipment. 

The Deep City Press is typed on an IBM 
typewriter, laid out in a spare bedroom of 
Hoffschildt's house and printed in his 
basement on a mimeograph machine. Yet 
the magazine, featuring three-color 
reproductions and artful lay-out, sells 
1 ,700 copies an issue at a dollar a piece — 
highly successful for a small literary 
magazine. 

Publication is not the only way to reach 
an audience. The Waterfront Writm, a 
group of San Francisco dock workers, grew 
out of reading sessions>organized last year 
by Benet and Bob Carson, a longshoreman 
and poet. Four dock workers read the first 
night, and 50 people attended. 

Since thea, tiie audience has grown, and 
the group has 15 members, indading 
artists and photographers. Most are from 
Local 6 of the International Longshore- 
men's and Warehousemen's Union. They 
have published two small volumes <rf 
stories and verse, bat public readings 
remain their major forum. 

Sharing their art with fellow workers has 
iftanged how and what the writers write. 
Gene Dennis of the Waterfront Writers, for 
eiample, worked on a screenplay for 
several years. The work was based on an 
incident that took place on the docks, but, 
Dennis said, ** there was this idea that the 
function of it was to sell it to Hollywood, 
and that idea wrote the screenplay. I put a 
lot of gratuttoitt aez and violence into it. 

**Since 1 started reading with the 
Waterfront Writers, I've been drawkg a 
lot more on my own experiences, my 
reactions to tbe woi k and to changes in the 
work, my relationships with tiie otiier giqrs. 
The Wirteftait Wckers gives me an 



incentive to come to terms with these 
things. Without it I'm not sure I would 
focus so much on this part of my life, ' ' he 
said. 

The Waterfront Writers and the Deep 
City Press portray whole worlds shaped by 
work, worlds which suggest that workers 
live in a variety of sub-cultures defined by 
their trades, each with its own mythology 
and its characteristic physical and mental 
landscapes. 

•*Death on Watchman Way." for 
example, about the murder of Michael 
Albert, a cab driver who worked nights, 
evokes a dread that is peculiar to the trade 
of driving a taxi. "The face of Michael 
Albert haunts every cab driver, deep- 
seated but not dwelled upon," said the 
editor in a note. 

Dockwork is also dangerous, but the 
threat of being crushed by a 20-ton cargo 
container has a different psychological 
quality from that of being shot by a 
**]oad," as cab drivers call their 
passengers. 

Cab drivers are loners in an urban 
labyrinth, intimately familiar with the 
byways and back alleys of the city. Many 
dock workers, on the other hand, not only 
work, but live, shop and socialize on the 
waterfront. Some never leave the area for 
years at a time and get lost when they try to 
take a cross-town bus. In fact, the erosion 
of this sheltered, self-contained world by 
automation in the industry and other social 
forces forms one of the overriding 
concerns common to the Waterfront 
Writers. 

Cab drivers and dock workers are not the 
only blue-collar authors. Singlejack Press, 
a small "workers' press" in Los Angeles 
committed to publishing such material for 
a mass audience, has been astonishingly 
successful. 

The operation, run by longshoreman Bob 
Miles and retired longshoreman Stanley 
Weir, started with the intention of 
publishing just one book, a collection of 
short stories and poetry by George Benet. 

"We knew George and we knew he had a 
closetful of writing that he wasn't doing 
anything with," Weir said. "So we talked 
him into letting us select some and put 
together a book. After 'A Place in Colusa' 
came out we started to think maybe there 
were other people out there with good 
manuscripts sitting in their dosets. So we 
decided to ke^ the operation gcung and 
see what happened." 

They soon were put in touch with Steve 
Packard, a steelworker in Gary. Ind. His 
book, "Steelmill Blues," became Single- 
jack's project. After that came 
"Longshoring on the San Francisco 
Waterfront" by Reg Theriault, vice 
president of Local 6 of the ILWU; and 
"Directory Assistance — the Story of a 
Telephone Worker," written anonymously 
by a telephone operator. 

A novel called * 'Going Down" by Oliver 
Ote, a Detroit caseworker, deals witb life in 
the social service bureaucracy and is-aow 
at the printers. Hie latest project is a 
chronicle of woffldng fife by a keno dealer in 
a Reoo casino. 

Another Singlejack book, ''One Year in 
an American Factory" is by Maynard 
Sider, an acMfemic sociologist, whowoffced 
in a factoiy a year because he could not 
find a job in bis field. 



m 

the 



CapitaiM — 




**CNi« abost $16 to tiK airport . . . 
FnudE tlie <ftttp#t ft ifT singing 
"Oty cab in the soset" to the "red safls" nelo^r 
as I flip off the radio and settle into passing the neit 20 
mias. at 60 mph, in a freeway iaterview. 
The guy in the back — 

regardless of which dolhes or atlilsde he's wearing 
is a miirar 

and this one's a big-jawed lawyer from Chi-toirm. 
"Really," I ask in my best Califoraia accent, 
"they named the dty of Chicago after ^ an faidiaa 

chief? 
"For sure," he replies 
"well they named your city after a saint." 

And Tm drifting off into a thoughtless meditatioa 
with the taximeter clicking off my mantra- 
I see the towering hotel at Geary-Powell 

as brown-robed St. Francis himself 
stooped over Union Square 

playing at the pin -ball game of Taxi 
and me one of the balls 
going for 10 hours in surprise directions. 

I often go for rides on my day off — 
it's hard for a motion junkie to kick cold. 

COPYBIGHT DEEP CITY PtESS 1977 




C3ieap Thrills 

■IIHHHHHB=aHMaaBHBH[il^Hi 



The CPE Belly Iliiioers course frv begimiers win meet la 
room 346 Union (third floor) at 7:30 p.m: Toesday. 

• • • 

The Tallahassee Archaeoiogica] Society wUl hold Its 
second meeting of the year tonight at 8 in Koom 249 of the 
Fine Arts bidg. Professor John J. Reich, Department of 
Cfaissic at FSU, will discuss the great fresco from the Vffla 
of the Mysteries at Fompeii. 

• • « 

Tonight's LPO movie is ''iUue Skies," a color mufical 
feattiring Fred Astaire and Bing Crosby with music by 
Irving Berlin. ♦ ♦ « 

Thursday at 8 p.m. LPO will sponsor a concert by the 
Winter Brothers band in the Campbell Stadiam pai^iiig 
lot. Admission is free and open to ail. 



KflPMN 




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mw Dfc M i«n 

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Mmt-Ffl, % a.ni. ~ S p*m. 



West Taniiatsael^sS)?^ \222-666^€^S 



Seminoles ride Johnson over Virginia Tech, 24-14 



Riding squarely upon the shoulders of 
fophomore tailback Homes Johnson, 
Florida State's Seminoles overcame an 
11 -point Virginia Tech lead to down the 
Gobblers 24-14 before a near somber 37,5S5 
in Campbell Stadium Saturday evening. 

The win improved the FSU record to 6-3 
after a disastrous road trip saw the 
Seminoles drop two of three games, almost 
destroying their cfaaaoes for a post-season 
bowl ifiviatloii. 

Joteison, whose up and down year has 
coincided with that of the FSU team, piled 
up 152 yards on 27 entries* tnduding a 



Bowden*s remark earlier in the week fb# f 
Johnaon was FSU's moat &ma^mm ranaer. 

Sticking with a very conservative offense 
throughout the first half, the Seminoles 
were unable to get the ball in the end zone 
until the last seconds of the half, when a 
fourth down holding penalty against the 
Gobblers gave FSU new life at the VPI two. 
After three unsuccessful plunges. Mark 
Lyles blasted in for the score off right 
tackle, making it 14-10 VPI at the half. 

The Gobblers scored twice in tiie second 
quarter alter falling behind 3-0 on a 37-yafd 
fidd SMd by FSU's Dave Cappeien. Fadne 



a crucial third and five at their own 43. VPI 
called on tatfhacfc ILmny Lewis, who took a 
pitch, sweep aroond right end after 
bmkii^ a tadde and went 57 yards for the 
score. 

Jackie Flowers dropped a pass on thkd 
and one on FSU's neit possession, and 
Rohn Stark sliced a punt out of bounds at 
the VPI 44. The Gobblers then put togedier 
their only sustained drive of the evening. 
Mixing up solid running from Lewis with 
chitch third down passing from freshman 
quarterback Steve Casey, Vn marched 56 
yards in nine plays, scoring on a five-yard 
pass that FSU s Mike Kincaid t i pped before 



Tech's Paul Watkins grabbed it in the end 

The second half belonged to the FSU 
defense as the VPI offense did a fast 
disappearing act. Neither team could score 
in the third stanza, but shortly after (he 
fourth quarter began . FSU drove 66 3rafdf In 
11 plays with Homes Johnson doing the 
honors from the three for the winning score. 

Late in the quarter, i^nr FSU nteed a 
21-yard field goal attempt, Bon Simmons 
recovered a Casey fumble on the VPI five 
after the Gobbler quarterback was sacked, 
setting up FSU's innl tanibdunn. 




Homes Johnson 



aigged and lagged for 152 yards 



Big play syndrome has Bowden 
worried about Seminole defense 



by nkhMy bMlifiQfMd 



AMiough their play was not impressive, 
FSU*s Seminoles were happy widi just a win 
against VPI, a teaaot that gives thM trouble 

every year. 

Last year the SemliM^ edged VPI by 
two. and in CampbeB Sta^ura Saturday the 

Gobblers held a 14-3 lead before FSU could 
get untracked. 

**lt looked like we had stage fright out 
there in the first half,*' said FSU coach 
Bobby dowden. 'There were too many 
dropped passes. We didn't make big 
catch enough. That is the one diffmtMX 
between this year's toam midlnat year. Last 
year we would have made some of those 
catches." 

FSU stuck to the ground game during the 
first half uid, although Homes Johnson 
churned out 75 yards, the Seminoles were 
unable to get into the end zone untfl Wally 
Woodham began to uncrank hb throwing 
arm. 

*'We ran so nm^ because we ate try^ 
turn to JOHHSON, page 14 





VPFs Steve Casey 

. . .freshman found the going rough 



A travsling exhibtt of Danish 
dMign, inducing nwnv 

I ihown in the Unitad 
rthe first time. Each piece is 
I for its outstanding contribu- 
tion to contemporary deagn. 

Come and mo for yountM, jiwt 
wf\at Dar>ish design is afl about. 

Don't miss ttHt exciting d ewgn 
festival. Openii>g Monday, Nov. 13. 
Only ai Sew' Oadgn. 

Sponsorad by Sw Oanirti MWMry 
of Foiaign Affaba 

Mton.-F(LS:3l»a30O 
Sat. 9:30-6:00 
Sun. 1900-&00 




Tha 

semi-pendent lamp from Fog 
Cr Mon4> give the fin# 
touch to any 



sca^ design 

MO 4 



in*" 



^4 / Monday. November 13, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



'ft 




-i i 



m4k 



Johnson 




to estalyiisli m food 

it's toi^ to 
when everyone is 
twUtntlieaii 

On Johnson, Bovdea remarked that the 
talented tailback mam waata to play and 
practke hard. "Fm not as ooaoencd about 
Homea ' attitode aa 1 am about the attitade 
of ow filiqm towwd lis," Bowden said. 

Johnaoa pointed out that the offensive 
Ine did a great job and thnt FSU jnt plafod 
food solid iDOtbidL 

"I can't rea^ say this was my best 
game/' Johosoo said of bis perforniaace, 
152 yards in 27 carries. "I'm stifl kwiong 
forward lo plajrhig in a liiB gmne." 

Bowdea was obvionsly di sa ppo ii ^d that 
his Semiaoles had so mach tnmbie Witt the 
lowly Gobblers, and singled oat the 
in c oasi s t eacy of the d cfaair as a peonnaent 
piiwiem* 

"Oar dcirase fetliag better* &Beept, fur 
every gaaie we seem to give iq> one big pfaqr 
. . .it jast kSb as," Bowdea said. 



The "Milier High Life Night Time F ag 
Football" diampionship begms tonight. 

8 p.m. 

Field 1 KA vs Brand X 

Field 3 Pi Kappa Alpha va. Lost Cause 

9p.ni 

Field 1 Cone Maulers vs Cone and Cc«np 
Ficfd 3 Real Gmats vs. Army E.O.T.C. 



Mark Lyles 



.dt¥99 for FSWm fkm TO 




« 




Classified Ads 




Electronic Tui iiUfcH 
Model 212 leu cartridM 
($170.00 New) CaN Slilf W 



PRICES IN TOWa 
, ru9s, curtslm. 



a iot » of •n^r vMfui 

Mwns. The OW I^Bsatonetf 
General litre 1743 S. Monroe. 224-1434 
M F 12-5:30, Sat 11-5:30, Sun 2-5:30. 

SUPER DEAL I OLYMPIA ELEC. 
PROFESSIONAL TYPEWRITER 
GOOD CONDITION. ASKINQ VMS 
CALL $76-3505 

JOO HOO for ladies. Hooded Jogging 
tops, only $a reg.$15. POOR 
RICHARD'S B«fwMn EcMrds li 
PutHixfn 

NEW NEON BEER SIGN. WILL 
SELL FOR $125, OR HIGHEST BID. 
tUmtA, KBEP TRYING. 



BUNDY ALTO SAX 
ASK FOR KEN. 



FOR SALE-3 FSU FLA TICKETS ON 
PRESS BOX SIDE SCST OPFCR 
OVER %U. M4.13M. 

BRAND NEW ELECTRIC WINCH 
FOR BOATS OR TRUCKS 9S 
CALL57Mtf4 

Umbrellas only $4 reg. $8 at POOR 
RICHARD'S n«xt to Publlx in 

%\ JEANS AT POOR RICHARD'S 
Buy one at reg. price, 2nd pair is only 
$1. New sfyleo a brands orrivina. 
WeitMWWMl BMODhMi Cofilir. NORf w 
MliK. OS-m. Opoa 7 aays 

NOW TO BLOW YOUR NOSE IN 
PUntlC-tfitacrootty and witti ttie ease 
of on oavcfllod CivlMi aantfenian. 
Tliit and more naceosory social skills 
♦obao Wered in a twmo-otiidym 
Wotcti ftw Flomboov dootNliai. 
RE AWARE! 

OIBMn JSS Acoustic Guitar Early 'Ms 
1 721 W. Po n soco lo Just 



20 Gallon Aquariunrt setup, with fish 
equipment $32. Call 5764758. Must 
sell to pay for thesis! 

SmWi Cerono ^ typewrmr tfO. % 
•WWIte chain lock bosliet inc. 
924-4013. 224 24*1 ask for mom. 




'70 PONT 

PS PB AC boot Offor 
toootSlgmoCM 



174 FIAT SPIDER - OOOO 
CONDITION. SOO Of aOS Wost 
T4 



TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE 
1975 Vega station %wagon m good 
condition new brokos ft tfret. WW not 
explode if hit from rear. $1jii CMI 
Dawn at 644-4075 M-F $ to 5. 

71 TR4 GOOD CONDITION, 
ONE OWNER, LOW MILEAGE 
S7M737 

1969 Road runner excellent condition 
must SOO to opprocloto Coll 224-5S1f 




1975 KAWASAKI 400, VERY GOOD 

CONDITION, CALL 5766i8< 

SUDOR REST OFFER 

HONDA 500F 1972 Yoshmura cam, 
Kerker headers, K&Ns, Lockhart Oil 
Cooler Si Thermostat, Latter Mags, 
Continontol tiros, lugsogo rock. 




Large fum. studio apt. $135. nrvjrrm 
includes cable and gart>age col lection . 
Dunwoody Apartments, 405 Oun- 
woody St. R«. monogor aS4Mb or 
315^392. Sorry, no pols. 

Toko owor ORiR'Oct at Osceola Holl 
nico room pool souna parties 
Coll Cindy ot 2241215 or 21MM0 



CHATEAU DE ROI APARTMENTS 
511 N. Woodward- walk shident union 
1 bdr. turn., doon, quiot« sound- 
proof pool, l a wMSr y. SMI. 
Coil 222-0420 

COBLE TERRACE 1BDRM APTS 
unfurnished $140 furnished $155 pool 
caMo dow to cofnpiio coH SIS-m 

11-1 M-F 

ONE BEDROOM APT. FOR SUB- 



Nicely fum. 3 bdrm apartment. 
corpoM wHh control o-h to suMot for 

COH 2224940 



ROOM OOMON. 1-3UTIL. GREAT 
HOUSE $775510 WOODED LOT PETS 
OK,OLDER STUDENT PRE. 



Sublet 1 

0¥Oll. IflMnOS) 



bdrm fum opt 



FSU. 
•HUN. CaN 



two one bedrm apts 6 mis sw large 
yard unfurn electric included $125; 
$135 070-2775 



onW. 



.d rJfa 




PW. %n o 

AvailaMo 
oHer 5. 



1-3 



Mt. CBR 



Wonted! One student coupon for the 
Florida Gonio. Coll 077-4666. 

NEED TWO TICKETS FOR THE 
NAVY GAME. CALL LISA AT 
224 2768. WILL PAY. 

ROOMMATE WANTED FOR 3 
BORM APT SPANISH OAKS $125-mo 
CALL 222 7B74 AFTER IS. 

I need four tickets together for the 
FSU Navy game Im willing to pay If 
you have 2 or 3 together Im also 
mtorostod Call Isaac 2225503 PM 



INSTANT CASHI 

PAVING TOP S 4 GOLD RINGS. 

MOST CLASS R INGS $10-30. 

WEDDING BANDS $8 20 

LG 14k SIGNET RINGS $20-40. 

PRICES DEPEND ON WEIGHT. 

ALSO BUYING COINS. 

siivor dollars poyins miii. S4 ofcli. 
Buying oil oRtor silver, gold coins. 

224-0767 Phillip, leave your no. 

Fern rmmte to share 2br turn MH 6m i 
from campus, wshr-dryer cable & 
HBO incl. $75 mo + Utii. Ph. 
57$-34W 

WANTED: 2 TICKETS TO FSU- 
FLORIDA GAME CALL 222 6131 

WANfED: FREE AAONEY. I'LL 
TAKE IT ANYTIME YOU WANT TO 
GIVE IT. 

6NAVY FSU TICKETS WANTED 
CALL 575-0018 AFTER 5 
CALL 644-2040 BEFORE 

MOTOR DRIVE FOR rr - f-1 IN 
GObD CONDITION PAr CASH 

CALL n mm on m wm asr for 

WANTED: FSU UF FOOTBALL 
TICKETS CALL 2244174 
9om*11pm 

FAAML RMMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM 
APT MISSION RIDGE DEC OR JAN 
SmaH-WfTIL gS-0808 

Tofor for managorial accounting. For 
information phone 644-5405. Call BNir 
6p.m. also for HR 390. 

"ti^^^^JJ"^ TICKETS 
CALL DIAWN44IW StftS 

KRISTEN— THE TYPIST 5764037. 
{ 2 BORM DUPLEX CLOSE 

S&n^ScSiJaI:' ""'^ ^ ^^^^^ 



PART-TIME JOBS - BIG MONEY: 
Accoun ting, Law or Pre-Law students 
preferred. All aggressive, articulate, 
hungry students o k Need sales reps 
for CAP LSAT Cassette Home Shxly 
Programs. Call Jim Dee at Totaltapo, 
inc. Toll Free 1-000-074-7599. In 
Florido coll collect 90407^201. 15BS 
N.W. lORi Av., Gamotvillo, Fl. 32104 

PART-TIME EVENINGS 
O-Hp.m. three nights per week. Car 
Call 224-2518 2-4pm M-F. 



Position ovailable for nule or fomolo 
for profoaoionol babysitting Fridoy 
ond Soturdoy nights toi pro-sctiool. 
Would work with older children. 

Music, elem.Ed. or related field of 
study. Position also available for 
music or dance major M-F,3:30 to 
6:00 Coil for interview Tuos-Fri 
S-IIAM, 4:3S^S:30PM, 305-5719 

PART TIME EVENINGS. 6-9p.m. 
3 nights. Car necessory. CaN 2S6-SS1S. 

2-4p.m. Mon-Fri. 

Part time clerk typist, l lVi hrs. a 
day, afternoon s . Coll 898-7712 lor 
It. 



OVERSEAS JOBS — Summer full 
time. Europe, S. America, Australia, 
Asia, etc. All fields, $500 1200 
nrtonthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. 
Free info — Write: International Job 
Center, Bok 44I0^B Borkoloy, CA 

947B4. 

STUDENTS- 

PLEASANT TELEPHONE WORK- 
Eam Xmas nr>oney, full & part time 
worl< available. Call 224-2318. 

No experience necessary- Bored as a 
secretary, salesperson or clerk? Like 
people and exercise? A fantastic 
opportunity for a new rewarding 
career with Elaine Powers Figure 
Salon. Will h-ain for full or 
positions Call 385-5144 




* « * • 



FSU-Navy coupons- willing to pa. 
premiums. Call S75-94M. between 0-9 
pjn. 

r I' >^ # #« 4 # » # • 



Typing — oH sorts — 
correcting typewriter 
of tapes. Reliable. Call S764nS 9 to S. 

Typing: 70c pg. call 306-9310. 

Typing: experienced professional 
secretary with IBM self c orm c Wn g 
typewriter 79c to 1.00 per page Can 
cial rates ovoiloMe. 



HOL I DAY PORTRAITS in convenient 
packages... 2 5x7s, 4 wallets only 
SI 7.50- 1 8x10, 2 5te7s, 4 wallets only 
$27.50 thru Nov. 25 at Delmar Shjdio 
Photography ywh S. AAonroe St. Call 
224 M24 



Typing IBM 
50c per 



fast efficient 
DBL spoco^ 85c single 



KICKOFF MONDAY'S WITH FREE 
POOL FOR LADIES, ORINIC BUSCM 
$1.75 PMcior OtBMWSCUKttt N. 



Let POOR RICHARD'S hem your 
Dants or jeans for only $1 50 {wash 
and dry 1st -h bring ttte shoes you plan 
to wear w-tt>em) next to Publix in 
WesNifOod Shopping Cantar S7S-2IM 
Open 7 doys o 



BacKga-^mon Tournament CosH 
Prizes every Mon. at 7:31^ 
POOR PAUL'S POURNOUSE next N 



BASS LESSONS 
Jazz and Contemporary Styles 
TECHN IQUE AND THEORT 



•AY RAP GROU PGAYRAPGROUP 

on Tuastfays Opjn. 318 Oryan 



etc 



APPUANCE REPAIR 

Service on all major appliances, air 
conditioning and hooting. Sales 
recorNfltioned units wifti 90 day 
warranty. Call MarsliRiL 
599-717? (pocket beeper) 
Evening «7l-5024. LICENSED 



TYPING, FAST, 
AAACHINE THESIS, 
70c pg. 314^4043. 



EXECUTIVE 



AlR» 



\ DO CNAIR WKAVINO AND 
CAN I NO. Good references, reason 
able ralos. Call Rhonda around 6 
evenings. 574-8502. 

TYPING all sorts reasonable - 
correcting typewriter - tronscripis of 
RenoMo, can SM^OIS f to 5. 



EXPERIENCED TYPIST 
Term papers, dissertations, theses 
ph 575-3495 0om-5pm . After 5-8774900 



OANNI VOGT SLEEPS IN A TENT, 
THE PERVERT, AND HE RIDES A 
BIKE, TOO SMELL HIM SOME 

TIME, YOU'LL SEE. 

SIGMA NU CONGRAOULATES 
NEWLY ELECTED SENATOR 
BILLY BYRD. GO FOR ITI 

NOOTSY Is that Lootsy ready 
wtid?TOOTSY HEY DROZ! NOOTSY 
SO NICEt STOOSY 

STEVE PATTISON W»«V 00 THEY 
CALL YOU TINY? Are you short «r 
dont you meet the STANDARD 

Free Mictielob Draft for ladies every 
day from 3-4 and l-^.m POOR 
PAULS POURMOUSE aext to 



is your car sick? I can 
better. I repair 
Mllte 224000 



If 



HOUSE PAINTING 
WALLCOVERING 
PRESSURE WASHING 
f wperiencoU 1. 1 eosoiiabla 
Call Jeff 224-7745 for oottmoto 

Durbin 574-1900 



Keep iatune 
CRAIO MjOCH piano TUNINO 
RmORATION, MOVINOS, 
ESTIMATES 
222-5404 



IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! 
Send $1.00 for your 254-paoe, moll 
order catalog of Collegiate Research. 
10,250 topics ilsled. Prompt Delivery. 
Box 2S907 B, LOS <MB8l80, QMT. IIMf 
(213) 



TODAY'S TRADING POST TREAT: 
Free medium beverage witti a twt 
turkey and nr>elted Cheddar cheese for 
$1.97. Take home some natural 
nibbles from Leon County Food Coop 

EVERYBODY tS tN THE PROCESS 
OF DYING TAKE A MINUTE 
ASIDE TODAY TO CELEBRATE 



Kongi As guilty as vwe may seem, we 
w sfifi eGceptmp mviwnene •« w 
aaclal enllghting events! 

Ashtjrooke Pembleton Frenchs 

Alpha Lambda Delta meeting Nov 15 
in Rm 09 Library ar 7 3C PMmembtrS 
old ond new please attend. 

GET READY FSU' 
CHI O'Ss and SIG fife's are gonna 

I 



MED. PIZZA $1.75 AT THE PUB 1312 
W. TENN. ST. ll a i n ipm MONDAYS 

TonvTom : It sure was fun going out to 
at Jerrys and going disco^ing I 
me out again and 
ware 



I STRING TENNIS RACQUETS 
One day service. Lowest prices in 
town Call Bill at 574-0200 



JEFF THOMPSON 
YOU'RE SOOOOOOO DAMN 
FUNNYHI GUESS WHO? 




CHILLY DAYS ARE FOR CHILI ! 
Afid one of our HOT BUYSI Irf J** 
STREAK! Warm mools anT 
1 in 11*0 Union. 



Have an idaa7 A \ 
Government cooM 



solver Aay 



574-4524. 



Not sure wtielher you ^ 
attorney for vour pr«««S»'.,!i; 
Student Legal fiirvicos at 04414 iior 

come by sSURiiP. «Bt«n btiP 

it's free! 

ANY BAND THAT PLAYS ANY 
ORIGINAL TUNES NOW •$ YOJJJ 
CHANCE TO GET ON TELEVISION 
FSU Sf»ECTRUM CALL 2225503 

Patriots! Help political prisoner pusn 
people power! Pride, por£««j 
pad? Part tin>e. Jim " 



I 



urph 
SA a 



reason, thf FSl 
deam roared back 
Ulabama 76-43 Saturd 
Fndav nigbt. tbe Ser 
Ibrcaker to Mississipp 
(oach DUnc Murp 
,ng pleasure with her 
[nights. wi« Cfpcd 
FSU's aoii.tiialiOB 
aguars. 

• We played Bkliid 

|,n the sc<t)nd half 
Leil." the fifth year 
lotfense was great. ^ 
Ifast break vcrv cffci 
lio man defense was tr 
Ivery dominating." 
I FSU was in such 
that Murphy was abl 
giving all 15 pla 
[freshmen, a chance t 
1 elusion among thos 
tassetcr. Highly sou 
llassctcr has been 
pre -season. Ill ooly 
six-foot Lasscter 
rebounds and addrd 
According to Mur 
fouls'* cost the Semi 
beat Mississippi S 
t)()-59 with a little o 
FSU committed two 

[Lady Se 
champi 

by gera 

flamtMau 

The FSU worn 
cleared the first I 
the nationals, as 
consecutive state c 
in Lakeland. 

Competing in th< 
Intercollegiate A 
(FAIAW) tourna 
marched undefeatt 
South Ftorida. Mia 
tttk. 

FSU, 23-9 on 



lAAAAACULATfe ' ■ N 
broke I'm livin r hi 
to eat; I got hole*, 
can't afford boozr b > 
yowr tympattty, lust 
t.7S-pM« Con 
I Office. 



NOVEMBER HAiR SPE 
OUR REG tlS ACID PE 
(22 ORGAMIG HEMMA 

CALL aos. 

WAREHOUSE HAIRCU 
PHONE 222 4M4 

Do you iMMd top score 
sdwol admlMion exa 
GMAT, LSAT, MC 
schedule and at Y 
Staf^ay H. Kaplan Ea 



WE TAKE THE TIME 
RIOHT Headquarters 
parma and great tia«rcuts 
tir» 3017 W. ~ 



•a pood fo your hair to 
•a you Lanham Proo 
Headquarters Haircutt 
Pens«co4a St S74-1S11 



FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Mondav on-h..^ "-i ktto ' 11; 



urphy's charges trounce 
SA after losing opener 



After droppiiig a vefy dote gaine to Open 
Its season, llie FSU womb's ha ihctt M ifl 
[ean roafcd tMck and cxvuhed Sooth 
^ibama 7M3 Satudi^ aii^ in Moliye. 
-riday niglit, the Seminoles lost a heart- 
■breaker to MissMnri State. 64-60. 
foach Diaae Murphy, tfaoogli eipcess- 
ig pleasme with her team's pUy on bodi 
[nights, was e^eciaUy delighted with 
FSU's domination of Sovii MMmmi^u 

[Jaguars. 

"We played a kind of poor first half, but 
itn the second half we played eitieBiely 
^eli," the fifth year oiettior noted. '*Oar 
offense was great, we were working the 
st break very effectively, and our man 
10 man defense was tremcndoos. We were 
very dominating." 
FSU was in sodi control against USA 
hi Murphy was able to empty her bench, 
iving al ^ 15 players, including ten 
shmen, a chance to play. A noteworthy 
Jusion among those firedimen was Laine 
l^asseter. Highly sought as a prep player, 
lusseter has been injured most of the 
Ipre-season. In only for five minutes, the 
six-foot Lasseter hauled down five 
rebounds and added six points. 
I According to Murphy, a couple of silly 
fouls*' cost the Seminoles an opportunity to 
beat Mississippi State. After going up 
hi) 59 with a little over a minute to play, 
FSU committed two fouls and MSU cashed 




Diane Murphy 



m opening 



in on both halves of the subsequent 
one-and-one situation, to wm 64-60. 

Pleased overall with the opening 
weekend. Murphy had praise for Jackie 
Arnold, Cherry Rivers, and Teresa Tinsley. 
Arnold led FSU scoring with 30 for two 
games. Rivers adcted 29 points and 
gathered 16 rebounds against USA, and 
Tindey, at point guard, ran the show so 
well that she garnered Murphy's accolade 
of "playing magnificently." 

The Lady Seminoles* next game is 
Friday night in TuUy against Mercer. 



Lady Seminoles sweep state 
championship tournament— again 



by gerald ensley 

flambeau sports writer 

The FSU women's volleyball team 
cleared the first hurdle^ in its path to 
the nationals, as it claimed its second 
consecutive state championship Saturday 
in Lakeland. 

Competing in the Florida Association of 
Intercollegiate Athletics for Women 
(FAIAW) tournament, the Seminoles 
marched undefeated through the ranks of 
South Florida, Miami, and Florida for the 
title. 

FSr. 23-Q on the season, defeated 



IMAAACULATE TYPING - I'm SO 
broke I'm llvin' In a tent with nott>ln' 
to eat; I got holes in my shoes and 
can't afford booze. But I don't want 
your sympathy, just your typing 
business. $.75-page. Conltct Dsnni at 
^ FlamlMMu Office. 



NOVEMBER HAIR SPECIAL!! 

OUR REG S35 ACID PERM $25 

^P.'^BJ^'***^ HEMMAflS 
CALL BOB. 

D.^'JJ.^^^^SE HAIRCUTTERS. 
PHONE 222-M64. 

Do you need top score on graduate 
school admission exam ? Take GRE, 
GAAAT, LSAT, MCAT on YOUR 
MMule and at YOUR paca. Call 
Stanley h. Kaplan Ed. Or. m-mm 



WE TAKE THE TIME TO OO IT 
RIGHT. Headquarters has henna, 
pernn and great haircuts. Haadquar- 
terslOl? w. Pensacola St. Slt-ISII. 

Be good to your hair so it will be good 
to you. Lanham Products now at 
Headquarters HaircuttlR§. WVT W. 
I'MiMCOia St. 9A-1S11. 



Florida 15-5, 13-15, and 15-7, in the 
cHampionship match, marldng die second 
consecutive year they have won thb event. 

Slightly disappointed that her team 
required the maximum three games to 
defeat Florida and South Florida, FSU 
coach Cecile Reynaad was aonedieless 
glad that her team won, gainmg it a herth 
in neit week's regional tournament, also 
played hi Lakeland at Florida Southern 
College. 

*it seemed we only played as well as we 
had to," Reynaud said. "I hope we can 
look better neit week." 



PREGNANT? 
TAPPS 0#l«^ «'«U«<J?SJ^J£ 

problem pragnanciat. 122-7177 MWF 

Complete Hairstyllng-Wash, condi 
tion, cut & blow dry $4.50. Acid 
balance perms $15.00. Henna's 
neutral or color $7.00 short hair or 
$9.00 for long hair. All work by 
students under supervision of quaii 
fled Insh-uctors. Tall. College of 
Barber Styling. 1221 Appalachee 
Pkwy. Call 877-3020 for appt Closed 
Mondays. ________ 

APPLIANCES 

Will boy and or tiaul off your 
appliances. Call Marshall days 
5W-7879 (pocket beeper) 
•TMiM UCENSfiO 



LIBERTY GARDENS 
Organic minerals for tf» backyard 
gardener Herb seeds fruiting midget 
tomatoes House plants Clweto 
Union 1 block all Tann. wmma 
Subway _ 

Thursday is "SEX N'Tf/' -gj 
Oysters on the half shell $1.2$ Dot 
L^wSSrau $2 pitcher, $40 glass 
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REWARD T'd FINDER! 
Lost dogs 2 yr. old blackAtan german 
shepard, male longish hair, 1 yr. old 
blond golden retriever, fenoale, no 
collars. Both dogs tatooed on right 
inner thigh with S.S. no., must took 
closely. If saan or found plaaM cal 

877.46Si, 997^fm, Tti^m. m-Tsm. 

LOST: Four keys on a plastic key 
Cham with photographs. If found 
> call ftil MM Small Reward. 



FOUND, pair ladies brown f rame d 
Glasses in blue c«e a couple weeks 
ago in Dean's office, coNaoa of 

Business rm. 



Lost, 10 month old fern Irish setter 
waaring lealtter collar with Kiska on 
It. Vicinity of FSU Dairy farm, golf 
course. Alumni Villaoe. call •77-249t 
Reward. > 




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Tuesday 

NovwImk 14, 187t 




Serving TallahaasM for b 



Amin leading crocodiles, 
troops against Tanzania 



mm 



MMMMI 



DAR E$ SALAAM. Tanzania — 
Uganda's President Idi Amin went to the 
battlefront yesterday to lead his troops from 
a command post in the Kagera River 
swampland they have captured from 




Idi Amin 



Tanzania. 

Despite Ugandan radio's vivid accounts 
of Tanzanian troops being devoured by 
crocodiles and tormented by safari ants, 
there were no definitive reports on the 
progress of Tanzania's counter offensive to 
"destroy" the Ugandan anny and miseat 
Amin. 

Tanzanian sources said only that the 
battle, more than 36 hours old. was 
continuing. The government's only official 
communique since fighting began 15 days 
ago in the marshy Kagera territory, a 700 
square mile salient occupied by Uganda, 
vowed Tanzanian troops would "destabi- 
lize" Amin. wlio was liMed a "modeni 
day Hitler." 

Uganda claimed the enemy had been 
bloodily repulsed, and said many Tanzanian 
soldiers lost their lives to ferocious 
crocodiles in the tropical river separating 
the two armies. Amin's troops said they 
tape recorded 'screams of honor" as the 
reptiles attacked their prey. 

There was no independent confinnation 
of either report. 

Amin again tendered an olive branch to 



Tanzania — if his conditions are met. 

Radio Uganda said Ugandan troops 
would withdraw from occupied territory if 
Dar es Salaam agrees to stop interfering 
with Amin's regime. The stocky dictator 
also insisted former Ugandan President 
Milton Obote must abandon his exile in 
Tanzania and move to another country. 

A presidential aide in Kampala said 
foreign press reports that 1.200 Libyan 
troops had arrived in Uganda to bolster 
Amin's shaky regime were "absolutely 
nonsense." 

Radio Uganda said "the conqueror of the 
British empire" — Uganda's current title of 
reverence for Amin. who has been a soldier 
since boyhood and was a sergeant major in 
the British colonial service — "is now 
conducting the battle at the front line." 

Uganda gave no information on the 
outcome of the Kagera River battle, 
although Amin's aide. Bob Astles, said: "It 
was total murder out there. Most of the 
Tanzanians perished and our boys sent back 
tapes to the president of the screams of 
horror as the Tanzanians were attacked by 
crocodiles." 



Anti-Semitism suspected in UF fracas 



GAINESVILLE (UPI) — The University of 
Florida and the student-run Inter- 
Fraternity Council launched separate 
investigations yesterday to determine if 
anti-Semitism was involved in a fracas 
between rival fraternities last week. 

UF President Robert Q. Marston said the 
university's Office of Student Affairs, under 
vice president Arthur Sandeen. and the 
fraternity conacil endi wcHild begin 
hearings today. 

The investigations will concern charges 
by Tau EpsUon Phi — a predominantly 
Jewish fraternity — that Kappn Alpha and 



Sigma Phi Epsilon attacked its chapter 
house between 2 and 3 a.m. last Thoisday 
rooming. 

Tau Epsilon Phi members said the 
building was egged, fence posts and shrubs 
on the front lawn were uprooted and anti- 
Semitic expressions were shouted by about 
200 members of the rival fraternities. 

••It is dear that factors other than 
anti-Semitism were involved and will be a 
part of these investigations," Marston said. 

'•Anti-Semitisni — and other prejudices 
of that type — has no place on this 
university campus, no place in this 



coons have infected 



community and no place in the world," the 
university president said. 

Sandeen said his office was iBaiMirlBg 
individual actions against students who took 
part in the act and who can be ideirtified. 

**We*fe oMMemed about the anti-SenWe 
nature of some of the charges, although we 
are convinced there are additional p roblen u 
involved,** Sandeen said. 

In Miami yesterday, the Florida branch of 
the B'nai B*rith Anti-Defamation League 
called for revocation of the charters of any 
fraternities patticipating in the anti-Semitic 
activities and suspensioa from school of all 



ATLANTA (UPI) — Migrating packs of 
rabid raccoons have infected almost 100 
people in three soHtliem sUtes and health 
officials say the epidemic b spreading 
north and west, porii^ a daueer to dogl^, 
cats and other pets. 

So far Florida, Georgia and Alabama 
have been the hardest hit by the invasion of 
thousands of rabid raccoons and an 
increasing number of the diseased animals 
h«ve recently been lepofted in South 



Carolina near the Georgia port city of 
Savannah. 

Health officers in Georgia said ycsmdigr 
45 persons were undergoing painfU rafcfas 
treatment, another 13 cases weve ic p ott cJ 
in Alabama and at least tiiree people > nd 
come in contact with rabid uaiMlt in 
northwest Rorida. 

It is not known just iMW aMny wWd 
raccoons there arc, but beakk oiBdalB fat n 
conservative estimate at 15,000. 



Arthur Teitelbaum. the league's southern 
director, called the situation an * 'extremely 
serious matter requiring prompt and strong 
disciplinary action by the university." 

On Sunday the Florida brandi of the 
National Conference of Christians and Jews 
sent Marston a mailgram. calling on tfie 
university to take ••prompt and diiect 
indodmg rc lOfstlon of (their) 
if dm dmraes ■■alnit the 



John QmyeiSt 
U^. Rep.» wiU 
speak tonight 
at kical chinch 



biy lenlin sahler 

OMnaiwwmv 

John Conycfs Jr., outspoken seven -term 
member of the U.S. House of 
Representatives, will speak tonight at 7:30 
on "Black Political Participation and 
Leadership" at St. Mary's Baptist Church, 
located on Call St one Uoch from FSU's 
Fuie Arts building. 

His talk is aponaofod by the Black 
Student Union. 
Conyers authored a Fair Housing 
M to the 1966 Civil Bights Act. 




U^. Rep. John Conyers 

and sponsored the Grand Jury Reform Act 
of 1977. In 1%7, he received the Rosa Parks 
Award for Civil Rights Activities from Dr. 
Martin Luther ICing Jr. 

In May, 1972, Conyers introduced a 
resolution of impeachment charging 
Richard Nixon with usurping the 
Constitutional war-making powers of 
Congress, and was active in the 1974 
Judiciary Committee impeachment inquiry, 
introducing an article of impeachment 
based on the illegal war in Cambodia. 

A senior member of the House Judiciary 
Committee, he currently chairs the 
Subcommittee on Crime and serves on 
numerous other snbcommittees faichnling 
those on manpower, hnuaing and national 
security. 

HU highest l^islative priorky at tMs 
time is the pnssafe of tlw Hnmpin e y - 
Hawkins Full EmpkynMnt and Bilinpai 

Growth Act. 

for the nation's fbtmc, Conyers piefers a 
democratically cmiceived agenda for 

make Job creation and human needs the 



ABC (diaiisflB niam 

Mow that it's certain Saturday's 

televised regionafly by AK (lee slory, 
poge 7) it hat been moved np Inmb 7 p.m. 
to 12:S0 p.m.. canaiiB mangr hamfPiiming 
events -to be 

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around new TV kickoff time 


Grants weigjhed today 






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4000 FRQ BudweisM' • Seminole Mugs 

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Al profits to United Way FSU-UF Studoat Ml* 

by 



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Regent app ointee is FSU fan 



by dennis mulqusM 

fUmbcau staff writtr 

While vowing to concern himself with the entire Stirte 
University System, newly appointed Board of Regents 
member DuBose Ausley said yestcfday FSU would 
definitely be at the top of his list. 

•i have a very strong and warm feeling for FSU^" 
Ausley said. "I am committed to FSU's role in higher 
education in Florida/' FSU's role, be added. **wffl be 
dominant." 

Ausley was appointed to the BOR yesterday by Gov. 
Reubin Askew, subject to legislative confirmation. 

"You try not to be parochial in jobs like this/' Ausley 
said, although in accordance with his philosophy of h^her 
education, which emphasizes the development of a couple 
of outstanding institutions in the SUS, Ausley said FSU 
and the University of Florida will recdve p re fe re n t fa J 
status. 

Ausley was also an Askew appointee to the Constitittkm 
Revision Commission and is former chairperson of the 
Florida Ethics Commission. A Tallahassee resident, 
Ausley is a graduate of Washington and Lee University 
and the University of Florida Law Schocd. He is a Florida 
Blue Key Alumnus and is currently chairperson of the FSU 
Council of Advisors and is a member of the board of the 
FSU Foundation. 

If Ausley's appointment is c onfirm ed by the Senate and 
the Cabinet,' almost a certainty, he will take over for 
resigning Regent Jim Smith immediately and continue 
until 1986, the end of Smith's term. Smith resigned from 
the BOR after being elected as the State's next attorney 



general. 

On the subject of recent BOR-le^riirtive «qpabbles. 
Ausley said he is confident both sides are committed to 
improving higher education is Florida, and wfll iron ovt 
their differences. 

The conflicts have mainly involved Miami Sen. Jack 
Gordon, an cm tspo te B critic of the BOR, mi4 Ciuuiceilor 
E.T. York. 

A friend ot Tallahasstc Hep. Herb Morgan, chairperson 
of the House Appropriations Committee. Ausley said he 
expects to enjoy a good relationship with the legislature. 
He said legislators he has talked to have been strongly 
supportive of higher education and he doesn't expect that 
to change. 

**That doesn't mean they're going to give you the key to 
the state treasury, thoi^," Ausley said. 

Ausley said he agrees Hie Conflusdon on the 
Future of Florida's Universities that Florida ualvmitles 
are lagging far behind other stales in quality. 

* *It*s time to expand the quality in the existing system, * ' 
Ausley asserted. 

A former attorney for tile Senate Higher Education 
Committee, Ausley said he supported constitution revision 
8 because of tiie BOR*s demonstrated commitment to 
higher education. Although the revision was 
overwhelmingly defeated, Ausley said **tlie debate was 
very healthy." 

Revision 8 would have replaced the Cabinet as the state 
board erf education with an af^iointed one and would have 
constitutionally empowered the BOR. 




photo by saNy sandusky 



Local anti-shah prote sters flirt with arrest 



by Jim cox 

fiambMu staH wrHar 

The Iranian Student AssociatiM flirted wltli mest 
yesterday in an anti-shah rally held on the FAMU campus. 

The rally was part of a nationwide chain of raffies being 
conducted this week '*commemofating" the shah's v»it 
with President Carter last November. A similar rally will 
be held tomorrow on the FSU campus. 

Violating the terms of the FAMU rally permit, anti-shah 
protesters began to filter out of Gibbs park — the wea 
approved by the permit — and onto the heart of cnqw 
carrying posters and an effigy of tiie shah. In so domg, 
members of the ISA may have been subject to arrest, but 
FAMU officials allowed the relocated assralrfy to conttsne 
even though the new location may have distatlied daases 
nearby. 

The Iranian marchers felt, however, that the terms of 
the permit had been violated by tiie mawaity when a 
loudspeaker system, scheduled to be fwovlded by FAMU 
for tfic rally, feiled to reach the <Mbht p«k sito on time. 

•'They stuck us down in tlKwe trees.*' said rally 
organizer Ahamadian AH. referring to tiie Gibbs park site. 
' *and say that you have tiie right to sperit as hmg as no one 
can hear you.** 

Charles Manning. FAMU director of student affairs, 
explained that the FAMU campus was not designed to 
hoM such rallies. 



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Business school: Dumping ground for the job-scared 



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■III ■ ■I nil 'l^i'" ■ MA 




edit sfi letters 




agree •r»f^ ttie 
I OOvernme punticatior . 



Edu 



It looks Hk 
IliiMiiiit Aarot 
appearances a 
as Neai Frie( 
pf oaWcwt. 

Steftt. a P« 
ao«e nolortt 
after raising 

akm*' metho^ 
Fnedman yc 
speaking en^ 

••Stem ' 
crn^ to h 
MStem) 
conHniifiicati^ 

yesterday. 

got 
to him 
in th( t 
♦•He told 
come back 
Fri^lmafi ^ 
added. 

Stem teft 
afternoon «: 
with the two 
not be react 
According 
vi^ted Taila 
and **dein<« 
honor a lettc 
by a former 
inviting Ste 
$1,000. 
Friedman 



Fede 



l«D 

The FS 
Office an 
Coc^jcrativc 
fke will h» 
Federal R' 
Placement 
the Universi 
FSU Union 
9'JOa.m.to 
lunch break 
p«ni* 

More tha 
are cipecte< 
agencies. R< 
here to dis< 
future emi 
their agcr 
identify c 
employ m or 



in 



Topi 




'FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Tuesday Nov^b^ 14 igTB 



Educator, SG disagree over icu 



by j«ff nrntHfiim 



It looks Itte self styled edacatkm 
theorist Aaron Stern won't make any 
appearances at FSU, at least as kmg 
IS Meal Friedman is student body 
pre^dent. 

Stem, a Polish emigre who gained 
some notoriety se¥etal years ago 
^er raismg Ms dn^jter to be a 
"^nius" through a **total submer- 
sion*' method of education, met with 
Friedman yesterday to set up a 
speaking engagement. 

**Stem feels that Neal was pretty 
cruel to Mm, ooasiderkig who 
he(Steni) is." SG secretary of 
comnuttticatioas Jerrod Levine said 
yesterday. **He gets a lot qf respect 
where¥er goes and the offer that was 
made to him was just economicatty a 
slap in the face.** 

*'He told me that he would never 
come back to FSU as long as 
Friedman was president,'* Levine 
added. 

Stem left Tallahassee yesterday 
afternoon after meeting seperately 
with the two SG officials and could 
not be reached for comment. 

According to Friedman, Stem 
visited Tallahassee three weeks ago 
and **demanded" that Friedman 
honor a letter written four years ago 
by a former student body president 
inviting Stem to speak at FSU for 
$1,000. 

Friedman said he subsequently 






Aaron Stem 

. . .wanted more money 

wrote Stem a letter dEfoing him a $300 
lecture fee plus expenses for Stem to 
travel from his Miami home to speak 
at FSU. 

"After I sent the letter, I figured 
he'd cidl me up and we'd UHk about 
it and the next thing 1 knew he was in 
town (yesterday)" to set up a talk ^ 
fior $1,000, Friedman said. 

**He came in my office and told me 
my offer wouldn't cover his expenses 
and that he ended up losing money 
coming to Tallahassee. I told htm 
'listen, you shouldn't have come up 
here without telling me,' " Friedman 
said, adding Stem's visit was not 
schedlded and completely unan- 
nounced. 



"I^eople jist drive up from 
Miami and ddMlli to see me. 
I>ecause I have other things to do,** 
Friedman said. 

Friedman said he cunsideied his 
offer of $300 — wincll he said he 
later upped to S400 — was in 
keeping with the amount usually 
given to education lecturers. 

"1 don*t think an expenditure of 
$1,000 plus expenses is called for,'* 
Friedman said, 'i was personally 
insulted by the man, especially when 
1 was totally above the boHi iMl 
him on all points," he added. 

**There was never a time I said 1 
didn't want him to speak. 1 just told 
him we didn*t have the bucks,*' 
Friedman said. 

Levine, who first met Stem during 
his visit to the campus three weeks 
ago and interviewed him for the 
Video Ceng's "Spcctmm** pro- 
gram, said he oonsidefed Fried- 
man's decision **arbitrary.*' 

* *!t*s a slap in the face of the whole 
school, and I know most of the (SG) 
cabinet is against the dectrion," 
Levine said. 

The cabinet member said he would 
look into ways to raise the additional 
$600 to bring Stern to FSU. 

Stem, who decMned an offer from 
Richard Nixon in 1973 to head the 
Office of Eoononric Opportumty, 
spends much of his time travelling to 
universities lecturing on his theories. 



TONIGHT 
OMP BOOKS 

ANGOU: THE PEOPU 
HAVE CHOSEN 

Iht ftfft fftn to com owt of Amoln 
its freo^ ■ tate 1975." 

FREE 7:30 120 Comnvoy 



o 



Federal recruiters visit FSU tomorrow 



ItoMMMaini 

The FSU Placement 
Office and the FSU 
Cooperative Education Of- 
fice will host the annual 
Federal Recruiting and 
Placement Conference in 
the University Room of the 
FSU Union tomorrow from 
9:30 a.m. to 4^30 p.m. with a 
lunch tweak from noon to 1 
p.m. 

More than 40 lecruttors 
are expected from about 20 
agencies. Recruiters wfll be 
here to discuss present or 
fiitwt employment with 
their agencies and to 
idenrify candidates for 
employment. Eadi will have 



a table in the large rocmi and 
interested persons can visit 
tables without prior appoint- 
ments. 

It is not absolutely 
necessary to dress formally 
for the conference, but 
since the talks may develop 
into actual interviews, it is 
not a bad idea to wear a tie 
or dress as one would for a 
formal job interview, sug- 
gested Stanley Teate. FSU 
aasistiirt director of place- 
ment. 

Agencies attending in- 
clude: Internal Revenue 
Service (nine recruiters and 
five departments). Social 
Security Administration 



(four recruiters). Drug 
Enforcement Administra- 
tion. Secret Service. Naval 
Intelligence. Nuclear Regu- 
latory Commission, Central 
Intelligence Agency, Fede- 
ral Bureau of Investigation, 
Alcohol. Tobacco and 
Firearms, Internal Security 
(Internal Revenue), Nation- 
al Army Aviation Center 
(Ft. Rucker. Ala.). Federal 
Home Loan Bank Board. 
Housing and Urban Devel- 
opment, Defense Mapping 
Agency Aerospace Center. 
Department of Labor 
(O.S.H.A.). Bureau of 
Prisons, the Comptroller of 
the Currency, and the 



National Labor Reb^ions 
Board.' 

The public is invited, and 
this is the only employ- 
ment conference of its kind 
held annually at FSU. 



waiuui lie 

ONTBE AIR?! 



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TOMMY'S teaitefor 

CROSSCUT SAW 

Tallahassee's mmSy Maes 

h»mA featariag 
Pat Raauey, Hanaaalea 

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mmi Tracks, 
aad 

WGLF - IM 

wUI hraaJeast live frma II 



pai^aiMalte fraai TOMMY'S 

TONITE 

adailssion aaly a fc aek , 

9 pm -2 am 

I -JazaE Rack 



HOMECOMING BANQUET 

all students & faculty are invited 
Frf. Nov. 17 at 5:46 pm 
in the University Union Ballroom 
Guest Speaker: Dick Houmt 
new FSU Bas^U coach 
ic: Worid Series & experiences 
with the NY Yankees 
TICKETS are $6.75 

iiiliipiniiiMnfl it" a table sat up In 
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urn MlEDI 



Arr /MiiiioN Mio0g picoi mm 

»f»fiirrriof>iflfVliflt 
4pfHtf iMc9 JWi 



Tf '^ HNIQIJI AND fHCORY 

Jim Crot«or 234^134 

KfllfTeN TMi TYPIST S74 4097 



TYPIWO, FAIT- eXfCUTIVK 

fyimif fit if. MM tu-nn. 



ANY BAND THAT PLAYt AHY 
GP'lOiNAL TUNES NOW IS YOUR 
CHAMCE TO 6ET OM TEI.EViSION 

FtM frgcTnuAt CALL msm 

TuMday Nrt«-« were made for 
M4ch*if>»> Ji /S Pitcher 35c giMS 
M2PM of Brow A Cmo 412 W. PM»1 

JOGGING SUITS. 8.A^.l Xl 
over 100 to ctWOM from r«^j i2 jS 
only 120 POOR RICHARD'S between 
PwblixA Echo rd't in Wostviood 



Disco Definitions- a buncti off lonoly 
poople witti no natural rtiyliMn 



Wi TAKE THE TIME TO DO IT 
RiGHl H<-4dquarters has henna, 
porm* and graat haircuts. Haadquar- 
lars m? Poraacota it. SH^^^V 



to your tiair to it wffi bo l 
fo you. Lanham Produrti now at 
HaadQuartors Haircuttin« 2017 W. 
PmnBcoi* St. 57*1511. 



STRINGS. ACOUSTIC 5 2i 4 25 FOR 
ELECTRIC. TALLAHASSEE 
PICKIN PARLOR. 123 CALHOUN 

wrvo got a hunch for twncti! Try a 
MUNCHIE WAGON 
wiMch an your way to ( 
coofctos and cofcos toot 

HAPPY BIRTHDAY THUMP 
I MOPE THIS IS THE BEST EVER 
YOUR A SUPER FRIEND AND A 
GREAT ROOMMATE HAVE A 
GREAT TIME FRIDAY NIGHT 
LOVE YA LOTS PUMP 



CHI O's and Sto^Wo f 
'am our smt tanisMi 




Spor 

FSU 
Me 



A con!»istcnt \ 
individual honor 
third place finis 
Golf tournament 
IB Sebring. 

Mennc*s vit f 
athletes as the 
moments. As th 
second consecut 
the women's w 
men's cross 
qualify for nati 
regional men ( 
swimming also 

FSl' I'"'* v-oacl 
performance . 

**I was cncou 
team." claimed 
really just seemi 
now that we're 
for the top |><>si 

Menne 's sol it 
second KSl' 
iodividttalcrowi 



ABC 
FSU 



HVh 



G 



iateni 

Wed 
or 




ORIDA FLAMBEAU Tuesday Niovember i^ ^978 / 7 



|nd music major 
lar competition in 
lo competed with 
rv, won $1,000 for 

^'"'st said. ••xh( 
' rofcssor. 




e suct> a great guy and 
a great time wim 

r s been gr«at kmHrf!!! 

CLASSES 6 WKS 
NOW. CORNER oc 
CALHOUN. 

/HEELS AT FSUI 
yon yoo can get fruit 
-';,7p^2S:^''chesatany 
-HIE WAGONS! Take 
:lay and don't BO focia« 



(P^|QIIM||||||P^|| 



<idies brown fra-^iea 
le case a couple weeks 
y% office^ coiiega of 
203, ' " — 



old fern trUh setter 
?r collar with Kiska on 
FSU Dairy farm, golf 
)i Village* call m tm. 



IDTO FINDER! 
Old black&tan german 
) longlsh tiair, i yr old 
retriever, female, no 
dogs tatooed on rigtif 
itt> S.S. no., must look 
or found ploaw cal 



Icoys - on* has 5 keys 

il, other has chevy, 
key. • keys. Call 
ttcott baltliid alage 



Hove you 
kkkoi 

oboU 




Mo a 
doad 
troo 

todof? 




Sports 



FSU golfers finish third in state; 
Menne captures individual honors 



A consistent perfonnance by Akn Menne, which won 
individual honors, paced FSU men's golf team to a 
third place finish in h»t weekend's State IntmoOegiate 
Golf tournament, staged at Soothem Lakes Country Clnb 
in Sehring. 

Menne's victory h^h^Hed a Imsy weekend for, FSU 
athletes as the fall sports scene moves into Its twilight 
moments. As the women's volleybaU team captured its 
second consecutive state title to advance to the regionals, 
the women's tennis team won its final fall match, the 
men's cross country team ended its season by failing to 
qualify for nationals while running in last Saturday's 
regional meet. Opening action in women's basketball and 
swimming also nnarked the weekend. 

FSU golf coach Don Veller was heartened by his team's 
performance. 

*i was encouraged by our play since we are a young 
team,** claimed Veller. "Menne is our only senior. W^'re 
really just seeing what people cin do in the fall. I can see 
now that weVe going to have seven or eight guys battltng 
for the top positions come spring." 

Menne s solkl three round total of 216 made him the 
second FSU golfer in as many years to capture the 
individual crown in this event. Last year Kenny Knox, now 

Um to RQUHD-UP, im90 8 




Allan Menne 

. . .won state golf tourney with 216 



4^ ^ 9^ 

" 3^ #v ^ 



its w. Ti 



imroducat the 

cms 

Gyroa iaan blond of selected nrteatt. 
Lightty seasoned and cooked to saar — 
to maintain that Charcoal-Mia" flavor. 
Saivadon Plia biaad wlili 



BOR AND WMi SERVED 

Open FOR LUNCH - PARKING IN REAR 



BASKETBALL 

TICKETS 

on sol^ ot TuUy Gym 

1 1 HOME GAME SEASON TICKE 
$12 Students $15 Guest 

(limit one) 

Limited number of 
season tidketi ovaiiobie 

VALIDATED ID REQUMin> 



I 

ABC picks 
FSU— Navy 



from staff reports 

The FSU athletic department announced yesterday 
that the homecoming football game with Navy Saturday 
will be picked up by ABC-TV as one of their regionally 
televised games. 

FSU sports information official Wayne Hogan 
confirmed that Roone Arledge. director of ABC sports, 
contacted the university yesterday morning with the 
decision, and said the game will now begin at 12:50 p.m. 
rather than p.m. 



r 



CPE Presents: 
Autlior of 

"Who Rules America? 



G. Williom Domhoff 

MsiMrtioadly vMMwa^ Mdologist 

Wad 11:15 119 Bellamy 
or 7:30 120 Carrawoy 



ooooooo ooooooo 

LPO 



FALL RLM SERIES 



TONIGHT! 



(at 7:00) 




AMD THE 
ARGONAUTS 
(at 8:45) 

--Silent 
running-- 

A imvensAL pielcasc 

TECHNICOLOR* g O 

Bruce 
Dam 

MOORE AUD $1.00 




GREEK COUNCIL 

presents 

HOMECOMING 
BEER BASH 

featuring 

The Winters Brothers 




in cooperation with Leisure Program Office 

Thursday 8 pm Union Green 

Busch Beer 3 for $1 

Ail Profits to United Way FSU-UF Student Drive 

LBeer provided by Chenowith DiBtributore i 
■^■^ '4^- -^MB^ -^a^ '^■i^ '^i^ "^1^ -^mJ 



i I 



If 



It 




If. 

i . 



y 




I' 

I 



^ J'' 



iH' ii 



I- 



Round-up 



MTv c & tie 5i tT C tar^ 
* m .l m iMer »c Ten 




IM 'fun run' offered Thursday 



■ - ■-■I it»icrt5<od 80 tke fanes: ' 
Tbicrwt » ^--v" vast ii »K ^jordf 

".."arJG: 'r;R'£ yw; jtma JHft tP 9Bft li QMQF' C3Hi 
'y . ' *■ - firwlNr aid sti'**" i^xie 

i> JWBI M UHi ^'ttX fttta iM .UHt tktltAm** 

• • • 



m m m 

The FSl^ f »f**v rirb 



thf UM%emiitv of Flcridj Wiac IiHiscy 
fLf^UM this past •eeker.c 

DtTOMtioiis «ii be '>eVr Wcdnevi*-. 
*' 3 30 p.«. for the FTT --^i-.i - 
Me w-'TVP Tfeerc « 



FOB THIS QUAHTEB? 

]k»4JY 1 JIM NOW! 



iiiiii 



FREE 



CLASS 



THURbDAY 

NOV. 16. 7 11 pm 



LIDAY INN 



S90 





VOL A LNiVEtiSMTY MMMKjSTOM 





Conyers: Black voters could 'dis-elect ' Carter 



b^i0h mangum 



U.S. Rep. John Conyers 



Will Jimmy Carter be renomiiiated by the 
Oemocratk party im 1980? 

'it will be toifwsstble for him not to be/* 
maintained U.S. Rep. John Conyers. 
D-Michii^, who offered his obaervatkms 
during aa imerview yestenlay at FSU'i 
Black Cultural Ceoter, and while ^leaking 
on **Biack Participation and Leadeialdp" 
last night at a Tallahassee Ghmch. 

"Kennedy doesn't have the guts to run 
ngttnst him. Jerry Bfown is only playing 
around for 1%4 or afterward, ao there isn't 
anybody left. Now, for the general election: 



it's Camr or worse. Take yonr choice.** 

But there is another side to the coin. 
Conyers said. 

**Biack folks put that nan in the WMte 
House and they can take Inni oat in I960. 
Carter's not too anxious to rendnd you of 
that, because he knows if yon can elect him 
you can dts-elect htm." 

Blacks have become an important mud 
vital poKtical force in America, but mu^ 
continue to exercise their power evtm when 
defeated at the polls. Conyers said. 

"Charles Evers almost succeeded one of 
the most venal f^ores (retiring Mis«ssippi 
Sen. James Eastland) who has evor 



breathed air in the U.S. SenMe.*' Conyers 
said of Even* ttnsooc<mHllil nUgipt lo 
unseat Eastland in a three-way race. 

On the Hscal front, the aevcn-leffli 
representative sud Cwter thould have 
implemented mandatory price coslrolt as a 
first ^ep in controBmg inflation. 

* 'Volunteer controls can't work." 
Conyers observed. "Can you imagine 
asking the real estate developers in Florida 
to voluntarily not raise prices? They would 
€idt on the floor tongUi^. . .How can yon 



Item ta CONYERS, fi&g& $ 



Florida 



Wednesday 

November 15, 1978 




Serving Tallahassee ior 66 years 



Iran troops open fire on 

anti-shah demonstrators 



TEHRAN, Iran (UPI) — Army troops 
yesterday opened fire on gangs of anti-shah 
demonstrators and over the heads of bazaar 
shop owneis who refused to open their 
stalls. 

Rioters firebombed the car of an 
American oil worker and torched the home 
of a Briton. 

Some 300 American phone workers 
stayed off the job in Tehran following 
threats against them and western diplomats 
said the situation is **extremely tense" 
between Iranian and foreign workers in the 
southern Iran oilfields. 

No casualties could be confurmed in the 



shootings in the capital, but Tehran Radio 
said "troops tired into a crowd of 
demonstrators posing as students" in south 
Tehran. 

Tehran Radio reported all oil workers had 
returned to their jobs after a two-week 
strike. But a National Iranian Oil Co. 
spokesperson said he did not know how 
many workers were back and added that 
production yesterday was expected to reach 
3.3 million barrels compared with the 
normal 5.5 million barrels. 

Hundreds of armed troops in trucks with 
mounted machine guns raced to the bazaar 
area of the capital when stall owners 



refused to open their shops. 

One witness said that inside the bazaar, 
'*a lieutenant asked the people to reopen 
their shops/* 

"They refused." the witness said. "They 
said martial law should be lifted. The 
lieutenant said that was not possible. Then 
the people shouted slogans against the 
shah." 

The witness, a young man who asked not 
to be identified, said the soldiers then fired 
automatic weapons bursts into the air near a 
crowd of about 50. 



County hedges on legal aid for poor 



by jiiii eox 

The Leon Coonty CoiniBission m^y use 
over $30,000 in federal grants as leveii^ to 

keep Legal Services of North Borkla oat of 
future suits against the county. 

Legal Services, which serves area 
indlgeais at free or redooed fates, is 
cmesAy eiigiMe lor over $30,000 m federal 
grants pravl#ng the organizatioo can oome 

up with appfoiiainlriy S6.000 m matdiing 
local fonds this montfi. it Is seddag the 
money from tiie county oomaussioB. 

The legal aid ocgaaliatioii piescii^ ts 
mvolved In a svit against the Leon County 
SherifTs Department on behalf of county 
jaO uiMtes a tet that hns the 

the 



grant appropriatiiMi. 

'Tra not gohig to pay (Legal Services) to 
sne tte people «f iMi Cavoty with ciMflty 



fiinds." said Commission Chairperson 
Dong Nichols. 

The commission decided at its weekly 
board meeting to table the grant request 
until county attorney Ted Steinmeyer and 
Legal Services attorney Jack McLean reach 
an agreement concerning possible future 
suits filed against the county. 

Commissioner Lee Vause said he too 
would not approve the funding if Legal 
Services sued the county on behalf of labor 
organizations. Vause also said he wouldn't 
vote for the grant if the present suit against 
the sheriffs office involved excessive sums 
of money. 

McLean responded that his organization 
could comply with V-^use's stipulation, 
which would not prohibit suits against the 
county on behalf of individuals. The 
restrictions Nichols wants to impose, 
however, are unacceptable, McLean said. 



McLean added he felt Nichols' 
restrictions were unnecessary because of 
good working relations between Legal 
Services and the county in the past, 
especially in the jail suit. 

The suit calls for improvements in 
general jail conditions and. according to 
sheriffs attorney Jack Sheldon, it has been 
resolved primarily out of court. 

"We have worked cooperatively in every 
manner with the sheriffs department." 
McLean said. " We use court only as a last 
resort." He added that Legal Services 
cannot easily afford long drawn-out court 
costs. 

"Our associations with Mr. McLean and 
attorneys of Legal Services of North Florida 
have been very good." noted county 
attorney Stemmeyer, who added it was 

turn to SenWCES, pagm § 



Three activist 
speakers hit 
town today in 
separate events 

^tiffi itsff rafMNts 

Feminist activist Flo Kennedy, consumer 
advocate Donald Ross and noted 
sociologist, psychologist and author (i. 
William Domhoff all are in Tallahassee 
todav for a myriad of talks, workshops and 
seminars. 

Kcnncd\ s appearance highlights a week 
of activities by local citizens opposing the 
proliferation of nuclear power. She will 
speak todav at noon in FSU's Mtx)re 
Auditorium and at 3 p.m. in FAMU's Lee 
Hall. On Thursday, Kennedy will be the 
keynote speaker at Lewis Park where local 
members of the Catfish Alliance, an anti- 
nuclear organization, and others will greet 
the Caravan for a Non-Nuclear Future, 
arriving in Tallahassee at the end of a 
statewide tour in opposition of nodear 
power. 

Ross, executive director of the New York 
Public iiterest Research Group, will speak 
today at 4 p.m. in Room 126 Bettamy. His 
visit is sponsored hy the Florida Puhlic 
Interest Research Group. Ross m the author 
of A PohHc ClliM*a Action MaMnl. and 
co-author with Ralph Na^ of AeUm im a 
Clumge. His talk is free and open to the 
pubHc. 

Domhoff, psychologist and so d o i o gi it 
and author of the book Who Inlaa AnK» .*cn» 
will speak twice today at FSU. Sponsored by 
the Center for Pirticipant Ectacatioo, 
Domhoff will give a taft and sHde show on 
Bohemian Grove, a New Yoit retreat for 
America's nifing fan^let, hi Roon 119 
BeUamy at 11:15 a.m. At 7:30 p.m. he wil 
speak about "How to Cdmmit Revohitioa in 
Corporate America** in Room 120 
Carraway. 




I 




'IN 




Loc 
hea 



t 

Leon C« 
con cr rticd a 
epidemic . as 
hern disiov ^ 

Although 
County, ra; 
attacked lOt 
and Norihuo 

The rahid 
include a fox 

••At ft re^ 
antmalt ^ 

monitoriiig 
Homefleld. 
Health Dcp . 
found near 
Cortectiooal 

\ main con 

that r.ibid rj- 
thr is€ t 
and do^s. 
"There 



F 
R 
I 



Isitcra, . 

limefnt ; 
Nolrf tr 

over ■ 
line, have a < 

actuary M 

So. cton t] 
Gel yourself I 
•ndloriofd 

Pilot r.' " 



/ 



• ••• 



• • • 



GULF 

ECIAL 

orts A Uktr 



»8er: 

[ORIDA 

lie Highway 

ith 

1£ST SEAFOOD I 



*ECIALTIES 

8.50 
8J5 



HOUl 
>-6 p.B. 



Local rabies cases have 

health officials concen 



f-LOHIDA hLAMBMU WtO flt WHy , NOVWIlMr ^ 19^ / 3 



liy howaril libifi 

fWHOTW »€#T? WrffVPr 

Leon County health officials are 
concerned about the poasihiltty of a rahies 
epideinic, as several rabid animals have 
been discovered in the area during tfie past 
few weeks. 

Although no one has been bitten in Leon 
County, rabid animals lunre reportedly 
attacked 100 persons in Georgia, Alabama 
and Northwest Florida. 

The rabid animals found in this area 
faidude a fox, a bobcat and a raooooo. 

**As a result of the discovery of these 
animals we have stepped up our 
monitoring efforts," said Dr. Kenneth 
Houscfield. director of the Leon County 
Health Department. "The rabid fox was 
found near Tallahassee, by the Federal 
Correctional Institute on Capital Circle." 

A main ccmcem of local health officials is 
that rabid raccoons and foxes will spread 
the disease to domestic pets, sudi as cats 
and dogs. 

*'There has not been a rabid dog 



reported in Taflafcaaaee ^ace 1972/' 
Hottsefleid said. '*But peo|rte should make 
sure that they get their pets vacdaatod.'* 

"The rabies vacdnatioe for dogs is 
effective lor about two years/' he added. 

Hottsefield also warned that if pet 
owners notice any change m the b^avior 
of their animals, that they should take the 
pets to a veterlnariaa at once. 

A person who is bitten by a rabid animal 
riiould contact a physician hmediately. as 
rabies must be treated as soon as possible . 

in the past a vicdm had to undergo a 
series of 23 duck embryo injections directly 
teio tiie stomach. However, the current 
treatment consists of five shots In the arm. 

According to a wire service story, rabid 
raccoons were firrt reported in South 
Florida toing the early fifties. Over the 
past 25 years the raccoons have migrated 
north toward Atianta and now have begun 
spreading east and west. 

Officials fear that if the current 
migratory patterns hold up, ttm rabid 
raccoons could reach the Appalachian 
Mountains. 



liBtii 



[Jl 



3, 5: 



; ■■■;iT 




Pastime Downstairs 

FRI-CROSSCUT SAW 
SAT-LABAMBA 

12:00 tM 6:00 BYOB 





to 101^ 




Is it crazy to love marker pens that give you the smootHSt, thinnest Hhe in 
town. . .an^ (eel so right in your hand? Is it mad to vwrship pens with cl^ever 
little metal "collars" to keep their plastic poin*^ ' '* " 

Not if the pen is a Pilot marker pen. 

Our Razor Point, at only 79C. gives 
the kind of extra-fine delict line you'll flip 
over And for those times you want a little less | 
line, have a fling with our fine point 
69( Fineliner. It has the will and fbrtitude to 
actually v^ite through cartxxis. 

So, don't settle for a casual relationship 
Get yourself ajastmg one, or two, to have 
and to hokj . at your college book store. 

Pilot Corp of America, 30 Mkiland 
Port Chester. New \brk 10573. V 




Inelnemarlwpens 



Mules laden with Blue Maguey pinas on their way to Cuervo's La Rojena plant. 



Since 1795 weVe withered our 
Blue Maguey s for Cuervo Gold 
the aentife way. 

It s the old way. And stiU 
thebest. 

At Cverva toe know that thereismly one way to make 

Cuerix) Gold perfect The way we've been doing it for more 
than 180 years. 

That's why peof^ still nurture our fields of Blue 
Maguey plants. Ana why mules are stm used to bring 
these precious plants to our distillery. Fhr tradition is still 
the most important ingredient in Cuervo Gold. 

This is what makes Cuervo Gold truly special. Neat, 
on the rocks, with a splash of soda, in a perfect Sunrise or 
Margarita, Cuervo Gold will bring you back to a time when 
quality ruled the world. 

Cuervo. The Gold slanclaitl since 

CUERVO ESPECIAL^ TEQUILA. 80 PROOF. IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY 6 1978 HEUBLElN. INC.. HARTFORD. CONN. 




f 



II 




Hy£ 



Incoming 
Bruv^n m.i*1j 
yeslcrdas 
legislative it 
Board of K 
$l79inilli ' 

••Wc u 

vMth that k 

said. 'Wt 

m the ^* t 

but there 

restrictions 
•• 

Just how 
rt cnrd S47(J 
the state c 
t)ayti>na H< 

Senate P 
levsis. Sen 
Jack OonU 
head Hcrl 
Brown. 
next year 
have said 
provide th« 
requested 

The BO 
contains a 
the general! 
$70 millir.I 
one-tinie oi 
scientific a 




Burri 






FtCmiOA FLAMBEAU WwlnMdsy, November 15, 1978 / 6 




man and become 
ith desire. They 
they are kissing 
v find attractive, 
ig hard and invite 
beds. Only men do 
I are supposed to be 
jove. 

Ince we all play the 
[ive, deceptive game 
myth. Men use the 
|ve to get sex, and 
to get love. We 
[ed. This produces 
afraid to give love 
jwho are afraid to 
exuality. But it is 
[me the teachings (rf 
I am not sure just 
n does to men, hut I 
il what it does to 

feel had ahout our 
ir sexual needs. It 
lieving that we can 
satisfying sexual 
with men who are 
re and possess us. 

it makes us sell 
dy and soul, in an 
narriage. Most of 
s feel guilty. Every 
with someone, and 
■ve feel vaguely 
, as if our pleasure 
c of some moral 
> not Nice Women, 
cr love us. 
hink we need to 
s way, we can stop 
sexuality from our 
h men and women 
ense of wholenc s 
scapes most of u 
do this witho't 
of our indepen- 
al world men will 
vc women without 
lossess them, ««« 
able to achieve the 
im. We won't have 
of each other any 



d 



Hyatt Brown down on BOR budget request 



by dennis mulqueen 

(lamlMMi staff writer 

Incoming House Speaker Hyatt 
Brown made it a clean sweep 
vesterday, as he joined other 
legislative leaders in refecting the 
Board of Regents* request for a 
$179 million budget hike next year. 

"We won't be able to come up 
with that kind of money," Brown 
said. **We certainly are interested 
in the goals of higher education, 
but there are certain financial 
restrictions beyond which we can't 

go" 

Just how much of the BOR's 
record $470 million budget request 
the state can afford. Brown, D- 
Daytona Beach, didn't say. 

Senate President Designate Phil 
Lewis. Senate Appropriations chief 
Jack Gordon, and House budget 
head Herb Morgan, who, with 
Brown, ^HU have the biggest say in 
next year's education budget, all 
have said the legislature won't 
provide the dollars the BOR has 
requested. 

The BOR s 1979-81 budget 
contains a $1 10 million increase in 
the general operating fund and 
$70 million in non-recurring 
one-time only expenditures for 
scientific and technical equipment. 



Brown did. however, defend the 
Regents in the wake of recent 

clashes between BOR Chancellor 
E.T. York and Gordon, D-Mianii 
Beach, who controls the Senate 
parse strings. 

•*The BOR deals with very, very 
sensitive issues," Blown said, 
*'the kind of issues that get people 
very upset. They are very 
intelligent people and they're 
trying to do their job." 

Brown said he had no major 
criticisms of the Board, although he 
added that he hasn't been ''dose 
enough to examine tbimt tlioiigirt 
process." 

Gordon has been an outspoken 
critic of the BOR. Among his recent 
criticisms are that the BOR has 
been illegally charging state 
agencies for research under the 
state's Service Tlnmigh Applied 
Research program, that the 
Regents stress research too much 
at the expense of instruction, and 
that the Board is overstaffed. The 
Miami Beach banker recommends 
cutting the Regents' staff by 50 
percent. 

"Several of Senator Gordon's 
comments seem to reflect a lack of 
full knowledge and understanding 

of the issues involved." York 




Hyatt Brown 

responded last week. "Frankly, we 
have difficulty at times understand- 
ing some of Senator Gordon's 
public comments." 

Gordon accused York of being a 
"Mettemich" and chided York for 
not consulting the legislature or 
other related bodies before making 
decisions. 

York expressed hope that he and 
Gordon could meet and iron out 
their differences. 

Morgan. D-Tallahassee. was also 
•supportive of the BOR. "My 



deafings with Ae Board liave 
ahrays been oofdial. I have fond 
generally they're pretty lespoostve 
to requests for informatkMi. this 
type of thing,** Morgan said. 

He characterized his relationship 
with the Regents as **good and 
pfoHt^rie.** AlthoB|^ he said he 
doe»i't ahrays agree with BM 
decinons, Morgan said he respects 
**the right of ^ Regents and 
Chancellor York to have tlieir own 
opinion." 

Morgan said the legislature 
would probably fond a considerable 
portion of the BOR request. "Imt 
certainly not all of it." 

Brown made his connenta 
following a capitol press conference 
at wlM he revived the post of 
House Majority Wh^ and named 
Rep. Tom Gustafson, D-Ft. 
Lauderdale, to the position. 
Outgoing Speaker Don Tucker. 
D-Tallahassee, did away with the 
job at the beginning of his term in 
1975. The majority whip. Brown 
said, will assist the majority leader 
in coordinating legishition as it 
comes to the flofx. 

Brown also announced the 
selection of Rep. Bob Crawford, 
D-Winter Park, as chairperson of 
the Criminal Justice Committee. 



mitimnfro 




by Raleigh. 



Rampar, Row, A-0 



by Puch and 
Moto became 



rt' ■ . ' ■ - ■ , . ip work (it 'ryr 

on ati modeis snd makes 



mm 




On The Square 



ABAC AUTO PARTS 
Student Discounts 
aOBW.Madisoffi^ 



VN \N S N. \ VVVN ^ 

/ 
/ 




Lecture - Film - Demonstration 

ROLFING 

Friday — Nov. 17 — 7:30 p.m. 1313 N. Gadsden 

Ms Darcey Ortolf is a Certified Rolf Practitioner, 

a graduate of the sole Rolf Institute at Colorado. 
She is also a practitioner of Gestalt. 
Adm: $2.00 - Free for poor students 



r: 



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HOMECOMING 
BEER BASH 



OH the Umm GrtM 

THURSDAY NIGHT 8:00 

BUDWEISER 
THE KING OF BEERS 

3 for $1.00 

F^tflEE IB^fd^tf CNis^^c S^MHiM^^l^^ AAif^i^iK 
fo be fivM out. 

Al profift ft 1* United Way FSU-UF Studaat Drivt 
Bmt piii M ii by O ^tm m t ^ Obtribsf «< 



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Grand jury takes up Springer case 




the shooting 
M. gitn fell frcMi 
puOed dead from his car. 
wmA Ihry wetc certain if 
before the iadtert. tei 
iiootiBg 

liad discovered «^ 
Sattkbeny, bat ooold 




Ckjnyere 



Services 



Mdk A poEMMi iHbose entire eztslmce is bued cmbl fHnfll to 
pniaiiiii ii y restrict h i nf If froir. making profit he asked. 

"And you don't have to slap a hard economic policy on 
everything." Conyers added. "There are only four areas 
that would dramatical]) affea the lot of the average citizen 
in America — energ>, health, housmg, and food costs." 

"Economics is the whole ballgame," Conyers said, 
noimg the disparity between the verv' wealthy and the 
majority of middle- and lower-income persons rests in 
"the racist, sexist, ciassist system of eoo&omics in the 
United States." 



nearly impossible for a legal associatioB lefine a 
presented by a judge, as happened with the Leoa 

jail suit. 

That suit is the only one Legal Services has ever 
against the county. 

The money provided by the grants would enable the 
legal aid organization to hire another full-time lawyer and 
another full-time clerk. Last year about 1,400 people were 
served by Legal Services of North Florida. The federal 
grant would be available after Nov. 16 if matching funds 
are available. 



Homecoming 
corrections 



by mike freed man 

ftamlMM wrr itw 

TcMnorrow's rock coaoeft featuring 
the Wiaters Brothers aad Tom 
Benjamin will, contrary to yesien^y*s 
Flambeau story, be free to the public. 

The C¥COt wiU be held on the Umcm 
Green at 8 p.m. and beer wifi be sold. 

Several other changes is the 



yesterd^ by tibe FSU 



ioe of 



*The leetpiioa/bnnch far 
of 53 wOl be at 10 a.ai., mat 11 
the Hecfat Honae. 



Alumni Association continental break- 
fast w ill be in Room 09 Librar>'. 

•Band Alumni registration will be in 
the Music Building Lounge Friday from 
liocm to 5 p.m. and Saturday from 9 to 
9:45 a.m. There will also be a reception 
for the band alumni at 9 p.m. Saturday 
at the SpaiMfh Oaks OybhmiBC l^h 
Road. 

•**The Student Prince," an opera, 
wiU be periormed Thursday, Friday and 
Satamfaiy at 8:15 p.m. and Suday at 
2:30 p.m. lidcets wiU be Sl.TS for high 
school stude^s, $3.50 for Bon-sladent 
adults and free to FSU 
vaisd ID 



In Brief 



a vacaaqr for a itsdeat 
p era o a s may apply at 
W— dw aid. Hie d^dfiae is 



206 If . 



IKHAID IDKMSIEDV of the 

FSU re%kMi dcp ai tmeat wifl ^eak oa 
"The Quest for the Sacred After 
Ansdiwitz'* at a fe%ioo oofloipihtBi today 
at 3:30 p.m. at the United MaastneB 
Colter, fie will Ifastnrte Us ta& with 
slides taken in Germany, Poland, HoBand 
and Israel. 

EDITH LOWMAN from Ti 
Federal Savings and Loan and 
Hassdi of Bamett Hok^g Company wifl 
speak tonight at 7:30 in Ro(Hn 220 
Business on mortgage banldng. invest- 
ments and trusts. They ate spomoted by 
the FSU Finance Society . 




DR. MARTIN ROEDER vmI] speak mi 
**The Romance of Biology" tonight at 7:15 
in Room 222 Conradi. The Biology Club 
sponsors his talk, and the public is invited. 

FEDERAL RECRUITERS from 20 
agencies will be at the Federal Recruitment 
Conference today from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 
p.m. in the State Room of the Union. 

A UEON COUNTY BLOODMOBILE wiU 
be by FSU's Moore Auditorium today from 
noon to 4 p.m. for the last time before 
Thanksgiving break. Supplies are low, 
particularly of A positive and O positive 
blood. Frisbees are being given to all 
dehors. 



Weather 



There will be variable clondiaess 
through mmouow widi lug^ in the TOa 
and hmrs In the lower Winds wil be 

easterly at 10 to 15 m.pJi. 




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• • •• 




Om A. Mdowa, PhD 

ProfassMNial Edhiog of: 



•Grant proposals wnA reports 
•Dissertations 




Greyhound R«, 

for 





college blahs. 




It's a feeling that slowly descends upon 

you. The exams, the pop tests, the required 

eading. ttie hours at Itie library, the thesis — 

they wont go aiiay. 

BiM you catfi. This weekend, tate (rft, say 

helk) to your friends, see the sights, have a 
great time You'll arrive with rmney in your 

>ocket t)ecause yow Greytiound trip doesn t 
lake that much out of ft 

If you're fertwig twed, depressed dPA 
exhausted, grab a GreyhiDund and spW. It's a 
sure cure for the biahs, ^ 




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fUOmUk aAMBEAU VVMlmtdiy, Novwnber 15, 1978 ' 7 



disco. 



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only a buck 




»rvices 
PIrfl 



^cript8 
>orts 



cends upon 
le required 
the thesis — 

take off. say 
ts, have a 
jy In your 
trip doesn't 

>sed and 
d split. It's a 



9:36 pni. 
12:10 a.m. 
8:25 p.m. 
9:50 p.m. 
356 a.m. 



222-4240 



aycare qenter gets first shot at grants 



by Chris brockman 



A proposed FSU daycare center 
given top priority as a 
rant -funded project yesterday by 
[udenl government officials. 
I he daycare center, which was 
•ntioned by many of the student 
overoment candidates as a 
ipaign promise in the recent 
iectioiis. would initially be used by 
ill-time students. This could 
unceivably relieve some of the 
jngestioo in the Alumni Village 
lycaie center and other daycare 
inters in the area. Plans would 
eventually be made to open the 
center to the children of FSU staff 
ind faculty. 
This year, student govemoient 



hired for the first time a 
grantwriter, Lindon Storm of the 
Human Conservation Associates, 
Inc. Storm will decide whether it is 
feasible to apply fof the grants at 
the present time. 

Second on the list of priorities 
was a combination of three profects 
that initially were separate ideas 
for possible grants. These three 
proposals, a Cannonball Adderly 
Jazz Festival, the Playwright's 
Theater and a visiting filmmidcer 
series, were combined under the 
heading of a Comprehensive 
Cultural Project for student and the 
community. This grant would 
provide money to honor Adderiey, 
the late jaza artist and Tallahassee 



native, and would make fiinds 
available to the student-written and 
directed performances of the 
Playwright's Theater, and a lecture 
series by famous filmmakers in 
conjunction with pmeatatioa of 
their films on campus. 

The third proposal for the use of 
grant money was tlie expassioa of 
the CPE program into ooomunities 
surrounding the campus. These 
programs are presently oiiered to 
students and members of the 
commttalty, but lack of response 
from many of the minority and 
rural areas indicates that these 
people are not being reached 
through the present methods of 
oommunicatian . 



Three minor areas tor possible 
grants were also discussed at the 
meeting. With the money from a 
grant, the Video Center could be 
expanded and the public could l>e 
given access to films on file in the 
center. This would get students 
involved in film production and also 
provide a service to the community. 
A grant is also being sought for the 
purchase and upkeep of a bus 
designed specifically for the use of 
handicapped students, enabling 
them to use many of FSU's 
facilities presently denied them. 
In addition, money is being sought 
for a study on the success of students 
finding jobs in the area of their 
majors ^er graduation. 




Lindon Storm 



aint job finished, parking returns to stadium 



liy suMfi wMm 



Take heart, tfiose of you who have 

Ihad tu park at the FSU pitch and putt 
Igolf course rather than at the 
(stadium, the detour ends today. 

The seating facilities which were 
I added to Campbell Stadium this past 
[ summer are being painted. Due to 
'breezy weather, parking has been 
moved to the nearby golf course to 



prevent paint damage to cars. 

Apparently, sbme people don't 
believe the paint wiE carron on the 
wind as it has. Some who failed to 
heed warnings by the traffic dir e ctor 
at the stadium entrance are now 
driving in vehicles flecked wttii 
yellow paint. Jack Gray of FSU 
Public Safety is re-durecting the 
parking and spoke of several 
instances where the paint dama^ 



cars, his own included. 

Ajax Construction Company ci 
Tallahassee, which bulH the 
additions, blames **lack of 
cooperation** on the part of FSU for 
the present inconveniance. A 
spokesperson for the company says 
the job could have been comf^ed 
mu^ sooner if the cars had been 
removed from the stadium bef<^, 
but FSU officials procrastinated. 



The paintingoould not be done when 
there were cars parted m fimit of ^ 

Reganflessof whoi eritics say the 
stadium should have been painted, 
die reiiovatioo is mwrty complete. 
Parking should be back to normal by 
tcmiorrow morning in plenty of time 
for Homecoming festivities, public 
safety officials say. 



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GOVERNMENT MAJORS! 
SOCIAL WORK MAJORS! 
SOCIOLOGY MAJORS! 
MASS COM MAJORS! 

AU INTERESTED IN SOCIAL CHANGE 

^ Donold Ross 

AirtiMr: Public Citizens Action Monuc 

Co-author Action Fof A Change, Director & 
LMvyer for the largact intrastate public 

intBfwt group 

TOPIC: CHANGES CAN 

How to organize and produce a group 
^ that HELPS people 

g V^here: 126 DoMamy 

Q Time: 4:00 p.m. 

■* V^n: Wed., Nov. 15 



S Sponsored by the Ftorida Public Interest 
Group 



Cafe^& Disco 

666 W. TENN. ST. 

TRY OUR DELICIOUS MEXON FOOD 

UDIES ADMIHED FREE 

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A copy of this od entitles you to a 
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COMMUNICATIONS 



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MkiJsz 

Daft or Glass 





















Hub 




com 




Frt-ddie H 

liiaovmtlBg i 

Im; pcrfonnti 

|>()W WOW 
Hubbard 

laying j« 



tbe sixtie 
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ubbard and 
is trumpet 
ome to town 



by larry schuttsr 

ftamlMau wrdar 

Fn ddic Hubbard, proclaimed by the 
ov«.icdgeable in the field of jazz as 
novating and representing one of the 
ost important trumpet styles today, will 
performing this Friday night with back 
p bv FSU's Jazz Ensemble as part of the 
JW WOW homecoming show. 
Hubbard, born April 7, 1938 in 
ndianapolis, Indiana attended Jordan 
ollege where he was thrown out for 
laying jazz. After playing around 
ndiana{X>lis for a few years with such 
usicians as Wes Montgomery, Hubbard 
oved to New York City in 1958 where he 
started to build his reputation at the 
Birdland Night Club. 

Today. Hubbard is considered in a class 
with such greats as Miles Davis. In fact, in 
the VSOP tour of the summer of 1977 
Hubbard was seen by many as Davis' 
successor. He toured with Wayne Shorter, 
Ron Carter, Tony Williams, and Herbie 
Hancock, four-fifths of the classic Miles 
Davis quintet of a decade ago. 

Ironically, it was Davis who helped 
launch Hubbard's carreer by arranging 
Hubbard's first recording contract with the 
old, prestigious Blue Note record label. 

In the years since that first contract the 
depth and breadth of Hubbard's influence 
on the course of jazz has been enormous. 

During Hubbard's two and a half years 
with Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers, 
he became a leading figure in the 
development of the hard bop style of jazz. 

Much later, Hubbard was an influential 
participant in several avant-garde 
recording sessions. Two of the most 
memorable and influential recordings of 
the sixties, Omette Coleman's Free Jazz 
recorded in 1%1 , and John Cdtrane's 1965 
album, lireariBB both came out of those 
sessions. 

Such recordings were innovative in 
turning the coarse of jazz back into a 
largely unstroctnred, ^oup4mprovisation 
atmosphm. The resotting form, termed 
"free jazz." is free of time, free of 
structure; it is a type of jazz based on the 
interaction of the player's use of 
harmonoy, melody and rhythm in a very 
loosely regulated time frtmework. 
npoch-making albums such as Miles 
Davis' BHdM Wnm and Wayne Shorter*s 
Weather Reptt. itmong many others, 
followed this mold set by Hubbard and 
fellow innovators. 

Then with the formation of C.T.I. 
records, Hubbard stepped into the 
forefront of the crossover movement, a 



Cheao ThriUs 




The Environmental Action Group is 
holding a Save The Whales benefit toni^t 
at 9 at the Pastime. Lynn Magin and 
Midnight will perform. The $2 donation for 
the event will go to the Green Pesce 
organization. 

• • * 

Tonight at 8: 15 in Opperman Music HsB. 
William Cramer will give a faculty recital 
on trombone. Admission is free. 




Freddie Hubbard 

movement which fused rock and jazz 

styles. 

Throughout the sixties Hubbard drew 
critical praise both in articles on trumpet 
playing and national jazz poles. He 
continues to be acknowledged as one of the 
leading jazz forces in the country. His 1972 
album. First Light, won a Grammy award. 

In 1974 he signed with Columbia 
Records and has had several hit albums 
including Windjammer, High Energy and 
his fifth and latest album. Super Blue 
which features Hubert Laws on flute, 
George Benson on guitar. Joe Henderson 
on tenor sax, Ron Carter on bass, and Jack 
DeJohnette on drums. 

Bill Kennedy, director of the FSU jazz 
band and the key person in the signing of 
Hubbard for the ROW WOW show, 
predicts an unforgettable musical 
experience for all those who attend. 

Kennedy, a new arrival from the 
Eastman School of Music this year, feels 
that his band has come a long way, and "is 
a totally different band," since his 
takeover. Many music faculty agree that 
"it's the best jazz band we've ever had." 

Kennedy has taken the band from a 
commercially oriented jazz band to one 
which plays the high caliber music of 
Buddy Rich. Thad Jones, and Bill 
Watrous bands among others. 

The FSU jazz band's hightened 
reniitation has begun to draw international 
attention. Holland invited the band to play 
a three week goodwill tour. With a bright 
future in the offing, Kennedy envisions the 
FSU jazz department development into a 
regional resource center for the study of 
jazz. 

The music to be played by Hubbard and 
the FSU jazz band Friday night has been 
^ranged by 1968 FSU graduate Al Hall, 
who is now an arranger for Hubbard. 
Selections which will feature Hubbard in 
the POW WOW show include Intrepid Fox, 
and The Sonuner Knows. 



Tonight's LPO film will be "1900" by 
Bernardo Bertolucci. The four-hour film is 
a history of Italy in the 20th century that 
focuses on the conflict between the 
peasantry tnd the landowners. Admission 
is $2. 

• * « 

A reminder that today is your last chance 
for the Ralph Hurst/Nancy Reid Gunn 
exhibit at the LeMoyne Art Foundation. 
The foundation will be open from 10 a.m. 
to 5 p.m. 



FLORtDA FLAMBEAU WMiMlty. NovOTter 15, 1978 / 9 




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Even tlKNiih 
receive S200.500 for 
this Saturday, the 
FSU's eooouMfl 
w- televised throiigl 
M. ssibly dtendiiig 
, .e with Southci 
however, will be b< 
Tallahassee's WECi 
ip Rorida. 

In addition to Wl 
game arc the ABC 
Greenwood, Miss.. 
La. 

FAMU head coaci 
at the limited expos 

"We're glad to 
[{ubbard emphasize 
have been all over. 

Tom Scan Ian. W 
the decision on 
network's. 

"ABC makes iho- 
stations will be 
yesterday that the 
carry it, but that ha 

The prime obst 
coverage appears t< 
rivalries. So)i<hern 
broadcast m the 4 

But Hubbard sb 
know if they (ABC ) 
positive way." Hul 
get upset with AB< 

For the record 
ever. For FSU it 

Falcon; 
after m 

ATLANTA (UPl) 
miracle 20-17 win 
only minor injuries 
worried about this 

"We've got a k)t 
his weekly news coi 
every team In the i 

Bennett says tiv 
didocated second 
Mcrrow. Merrow 
doctors try to outfit 
says he will see act| 

Defensive back 
receiver Alfred J 
linebacker Fulton v\ 
with 27 tackles — \ 
expected to see ae 

"Kuykendall is 
reckless abandon l 
over." said Bcnnc 

Bennett said qu 
in^ries through 
recovered from a s 
weeks ago and h;i 
history when he 
minutes to bring th< 




aORIDA RAMBEAU WMnwdiv, Ww wi to i W. 1978 / 11 





S ports 



ubbard not bothered by ABC slight 



from stsff rapofts 

Even though Florida State and Florida A&M will both 
Receive $200,500 for their ABC regionally televised games 
[his Saturday, the coverage will be vastly different. 

f si 's encounter with Navy, in Campbell Stadium, will 
h k icvised throughout Florida and parts of the southeast, 
ssiblv extending as far north as Maryland. FAMU's 
/amc with Southern University in Baton Rouge, La., 
)\»,evcr. will be beamed to only six stations, with only 
ilallahassee's WECA (Channel 27) broadcasting the game 
lin Florida. 

In addition to WECA, the other stations carrying the 
[game are the ABC affiliates in Jackson, Meridian, and 
;reenwood. Miss., as well |is Baton Rouge and La&yette, 

.a. 

FAMU head coach Rudy Hubbard said lie was not upset 

|at the limited exposure. 

"We're glad to have the coverage and the money," 
iHubbard emphasized. "We would like for the coverage to 
[have been all over, but it just didn't work out that way." 

Tom Scanlan, WECA station manager, pointed out that 
I the decision on where to televise was strictly the 
network's. 

"ABC makes those decisions. I don't know why only six 
stations will be carrying the game. There was talk 
I yesterday that the ABC affiliate in Jacksonville might 
carry it. but that hasn't been confirmed.** 

The prime obstacle to extended FAMU /Southern 
coverage appears to be one of college football's notable 
rivalries. Soyi(hem Cal vs. UCLA, which is also being 
broadcast in the 4 p.m. slot. 

But Hubbard showed no signs of irritation. "I don't 
Iknow if they (ABC) are hurting us. I'd like to look at it in a 
positive way," Hubbard said. ''This is no time for me to 
[get upset with ABC, or anybody else.** 

For the record, this is FAMU's first televised game 
[ever. For FSU it will be its 13th appearance on TV. but 

alcons heal wounds 
iter miracle win 

ATLANTA (UPI) — The Atlanta Falcons survived the 
trade 20-17 win against the New Orleans Saints with 
nly minor injuries but Coadi Lceman Bennett says he*s 
orricd about this week's oppcment, Chicago. 
**We*ve got a lot of homps and hraises/' Beimett told 
his weekly news conference, "but I guess after 11 games, 
very team in the league has the same jwoWem." 
Bennett says the Fakons' most serious injury is a 
di^ocated seccmd toe suffered by defensive end Jeff 
Merrow. Menow wiU miss several practice sessions while 
doctors try to outfit him with a spedal brace. But Bennett 
ys he wUl see action Sunday. 

Defensive back Rick Byas suffeied a bruised thigh, 
receiver Alfred Jackscm has a bruised shoulder and 
linebacker Piriton Kttylwndidi — who stmMd the Saiiits 
with 27 tackles — has "an assortment of bruises." AD are 
expected to see action Sunday. 

'KuykcndaH is bruked aH over, if you i^ay with 
reckless abandon tike he does, you're gcmna get hit aU 
ver." said Bennett. 

Bennett said quartert>«:k Steve Bartowski, plagued by 
injuries through much of his four-year career, has 
covered from a sHght shoulder separation suffered three 
ecks ago and had one of the best quarters in Falcon 
•story when he passed fitM* 176 yards in the final 15 
minutes to bring the Falcons back from a 1 7-6 deficit to the 

turn m MLCOi^S, page 12 




HOMECOMING BANQUET 

all students ft faculty are invtod 
Fri. Nov. 17 at 6e46 pm 

in the University Union Ballroom 

Guest Speokar: Dick Howser 

new FSU BaselMli coach 
Topic: Worid Series & experierx^es 
with the NY Yankees 
TICKETS aro $5.75 



at a taMo Mt up In 

ttw llHlsfv ov tfw Alumni Affalfs OMIaa 

(Longmira BuMdlng) 



Rudy Hubbard 

. . . FAMU coach pleased with coverage and money 

only the third game ever televised from Campbell 
Stadium. The other two were N.C. State in 1%9 and 
Florida in 1968. Furthermore, though both teams 
generally play their games at night, each has a winning 
record in the daylight this year. FAMU is 3-1, while FSU is 
3-2 in afternoon pames. 



Acaieef inlaw- 
without lawsctiool 



A" 

idelpl 
jr in 

K 



^ftcr just three months of study at The 
Institute for Paralegal Training in 
Philadelphia, you can have an exciting and rewarding 
career in law or business — without law school. 

^s a lawyer's assistant you will be performing 
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he Institute for Paralegal Training is the 
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f you're a senior of high academic stanifing 
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contact your placement ofBoe for an inlervicw with 

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We will visit your campus on: 

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for 

Paral«9al 




233 South 1 7 th Street 
Philadelphia. PA 19101 
(215) 732-6600 



Approve : .'';» the American bat Associ<3lion. 




1 

14- 



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II 



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ii 



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ii 




It begins 
Sunshines' 




Oe«v^ Bond bid 









i 






Tal 



FS 



by 



FSU pi 
figkHng roclL< 



wS lie anaigiiet 
9MtlMLeiMiCoi 



7:15 a.M.. BA s| 



It was tlie fir| 
iaoBtside 
nmoe csniTi< 

mrourj 
s, werr i' 
the taMMsli al 

The fsBy. whi 

;©f ( lA 
fBdenI placeriK 
violence about I 
American 

A few K.^ r 
••Get off F > 

Angry Iraniari 
the area in front 
Ihcy had been m 
with signs, and 
ihah of Iran a; 
hlsiness suits, s 
Tne advanced 
whom witnesses 
fraternity men, 
the shah. * 

Five FSU plain 
circulating in t' 
morning bcfort ti 
the two groups, i 
of the Ameru ans 
Iranian k-ad 
intervened to st p 
During the t xc ' 
studenU and th. 

said 
and ht 
front of tht w 
ignite the oil soa 
the shah and the 
**At that mini 
Iranian) said 1 
demonstrator let 
Four piaincloth 
hf Captain Stev< 



Florida 



Thimday 

NovemlMHr 18, 19^ 




Serving TiillihifWi far 66 jwm 



FSU rally turns violent; 
nine protestois arrested 



by j0fff iiuMiguffii, 

ImImi f^WtlQ wid iNrtJi FIKtO¥VSk# 

Kight Iranian men and one Colombian 
Aoman were arrested and jailed yesterday 
and one FSU police officer was injured as 
fighting rocked an Iranian Student 
Association rally in the FSU Union 
courtyard. 

The nine, all believed to be FSU students, 
M ii) be arraigned this morning beginning at 
M at the Leon County Courthouse on charges 
ranging from disorderly conduct and 
resisting arrest with violence to battery of a 
police officer. A demonstration is scheduled 
to take place at the courthouse beginning at 
7.15 a.m., ISA supporters said last night. 

Bonds set vaiy between $2,000 and 
S6.500. 

It was the first time FSU police have 
called in outside help since the Vietnam era. 

Police estimated about 500 people, 
including around 70 law enforcement 
officers, were in the Union at the height of 
the demonstration. 

The rally, which began quietly at 11:30 
a.m. with Iranian students protesting the 
presence of CLA recruiters on campus for a 
federal placement conference, broke into 
violence about 12:30 p.m. after a group of 
American students entered the Union 
:>houting "Up with the shah.'* 

A few carried signs telling the Iranians to 
"Get off FSU and Out of America." 

Angry Iranians and their supporters left 
the area in front of the bowling alley, where 
they had been making speeches, marching 
with signs, and displaying effigies of the 
shah of Iran and a CIA agent, clad in 
business suits, sitting with arms entwined. 

Tne advanced toward the Americans, 
whom witnesses identified as primarily 
fraternity men. and chanted "Down with 
the shah.** 

Five FSU plaindothesmen, who had been 
circulating in the courtyard since early 
morning before the rally, stepped between 
the two groups. Two Iranians grabbed some 
of the Americans' signs and tore them up. 

Iranian leaders and FSU officers 
intervened to separate the factions. 

During the exchange between the foreign 
students and the ant i -Iranian sloganeers, 
witnesses said, several protesters broke 
away and headed toward some shrubbery in 
front of the bowling alley, supposedly to 
ignite the oil-soaked effigies representing 
the shah and the CIA. 

*At that minute, me and Nasser (an 
Iranian) said 'Let's light the effigy.*'* 
demonstrator Jeff Rooney said. 

Four plainclothes FSU police officers, led 
by Captaia Sieve Hooker, rushed to the 




Arrested 

FSU Security Police affkers /kmeMMom iwpi end Jim 
unidentified Irenienpnmmr to gmmnd. ThepfoMeriemr 



photo by joyc» hvper 



) force 
ymechergedmth 
dieofdedf conduct. 



Hooker, diidiiig "Yoo cam't do tfiat.*' 
knocked the elQgies, and die woodm 
scaffolding froai which they were 
suspended, over the hedge sad into an 
enclosed area SBiroanded \sy shrabs. 
Several students leapt the traslies and tried 



to raise the 9caff<M again. 

Assisted by the other officers. Hooker 
tried to push it hidk down. In the scuffle 
over the effigies, oae (damdotbesmaa 



Flo Kennedy 
talk cut short 
by violence 
in FSU Union 



by jim 



The clash between Iranian demonstrators 
and police in the FSU Union Courtvard 
yesterday was "just one more example of 
niggerization. " said cn il rights activist and 
feminist leader Flo Kennedy. 




iytm to ARRESTED, pngm S 



Flo Kennedy P»K»to by iov«i hwpw 

^'Niggerization,*' she explained. * 'applies 
to all people who resist oppresrion. Iraniaas 
are niggers in ai^iortty's eyes, women are 
niggers, blacks are niggers. That's jvft how 
those asses in authority look at yon.*' 

Most of the people present in Moore 
Auditorium for Kennedy's noon lectore left 
after an Iranian Stadents Association 
supporter walked hastily before the 
speaker's podium and breathlessly 
sputtered, "The police outside, they are 
beating us. The poike are beating us." 

With the news, the black fiemak acthrist 
turned her head to the «de and said shiqiiy, 
••Shit!" 

Kennedy herself was late arriving at the 
noon lecture because she had stopped en 
route to speak at the Iraidan raOy prior to the 
outbreak of violence that resulted in the 
arrests of nine demonstrators. 

Kennedy left the Union Courtyard and 
headed for Moore with her middle finger 
extended saying * *I hope they (the CIA) get a 
good picture of this." 

CIA representatives were in the Union 
yesterday takmg part in a federal job 
recruitment ptc^am. 

••ff you have a move in you. move!" 
Kennedy declared. "The thrill of scaring the 
heM out of a pig or an administrator is the best 
lugh there is — better Aanmar^lBana, sex, or 
booze." 

Kennedy will speak at 4:30 today 
downtown in Lewis Park where local 
members of the Catfish Alliance, an 
anti-nuclear organization, and others will 
greet the Caravan for a Non-Nuclear Future 
at the end of its statewide tour of protest 
against the proliferation of nuclear power. 

Kennedy's visit is sponsored by the Catfish 
Alliance. CPE. the BUck Student Unioa and 
the Women's Center. 



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♦4»(WSJ«l«il •!•»«■. j*^-"' - 



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!man and Stml^ 
lire more us' >f 
Center tur [ ^ U 
r Florida Stud^ 
fliiii c at fovcniraer 



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Bandy 



Rudd 



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tilii4li» 



a«kf court for anolfaar jocg^ 




JM^iygl^^K^g^K ^1^1^^' ^L||^^ ^ 




•til ' <nrtS#t:t * 'r?iar fl'' 

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WUsmt i-itmi^ w ■ mfmM.w urn. 






















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* 



e BoATd of Reg< 
e TsUahMsee 

itorium and p«< i 
leaf Body Presi 
tauui met wit 
isctiss plans to k 
center or wHhd 

ction cost, 
ork was anavaiLi 
riednan's dafan 
scuttle plans 
•car parking g. 
tght opposition t 
I defiallely do no 
itraet) make it a 

ming and Fl 
'riedman cited th 
islatnrelaatyrar. 
esident t>efore ar 
tilding fees is subn 
lectSept. 1. andth 
|)R Sept. 7. 
['The key words ; 
ping the dvlc cem 
lee yean ago and 
lohitlon. 

rriedmaa, howevc i 
ttorium and park 
BOB is the 
eenient whtdi ha 
. county, and staij 
OK Corporate S< 
rd wtll not approv 
renegotiated. Hit 
days and 29 nights 
^ s and 20 nights u 
e p r cscn t a tives fi 
ic Center Anthor 
ter manager, h 
egotiate nae-days 
Until a civic centt 
uary. we are on ^ 
t so long.*' 




PIAN \(,iNGTHLM 
■ .ii > on one 
iiN peration in 
kerica will he showi 

fturt- Hall. 
"HE PEOPl L FOI 
meet toniyht at 8 
icfit at Tommy's, 
)rts. New membt't 
CONSUMING V\n 
the HoltKausi 
Ih King tonight at ^ 

host a colloquium] 
t ricnce Points 
iied Mtnistrieik Ccnj 




RAMBEAU Thursday. HmmPtm It. W8 / 3 



ns 



Insc 



he said, 
tors are 

informatKHi **fti^ ^ 
remarks during the 
to the univershy'i 

[resident Robert Q 
Suthem area diiect« 
juc in Miami, to visit 
>iit the questioii. 
^ddeat "an eiampie 
[for an independent 
- System, declined. 

rest of the week, 
istcin, southern area 
e in Atlanta, take his 



We want 
cure cancer 
our lifetime. 



3? 



|000 pounds of 
Jding revenge 
lan who could 
him from hell 
Into history! 



f FILMS MC 



1 



firaclei 



•RAFT 

lES!n 
UNDS OF 



ANCE Of 



G senate backs effort for more center use 



l»y ctiito broclcfiiM 

sti^ent senate unanimously voted last night to 
I B|M< rt the efforts of Student Body President Neal 
i ■^ViTian and Student Senate President Randy Drew to 
ire more use of the proposed Tallahassee-Leon County 
Tenter for FSU students. 

Florida Student Association is ai s assisting FSU 
nt government with legal help and lobbying efforts. 

ledman: BOR 
dorses FSU 
jid for use-days 

by daimi vogt 

astistMit ntwt editor 

F^oard of Regents agrees FSU should get more use 
} < l ailahassee-Leon County Civic Center since the 
rilim and parking garage have been scratched, 
lit Body President Neal Friedman said yesterday, 
irdman met with BOR Chancellor E.T. York yesterday 
scuss plans to get more use-days per year for FSU in 
center or withdraw FSU's $9.7 million share of the 
t ruction cost. 

)rk was unavailable for comment late yesterday, 
iedman's claim that amendments to the 1976 contract 
scuttle plans for the 2.200-seat auditorium and 
)-car parking garage require his approval, however, 
ght opposition from the Board. 

definitely do not think the amendments (to the 1976 
ract) make it a new contract." said BOR Director of 
ramming and Planning Forrest Kelley. 
ledman cited the student fee resolution passed by the 
Islature last year, which requires the approval of the SG 
ident before any proposed project using student 
iing fees is submitted to the BOR. The resolution took 
Sept. 1, and the amendments were submitted to the 
Sept. 7. 

The key words are 'proposed project,"' Kelley said, 
ng the civic center project was approved by the BOR 
e years ago and therefore is not covered by the fee 

ution. 

riedman, however, disagrees: "When you cut out the 
itorium and parking garage, I say it's a new contract." 
he BOR is the only party of the 1976 four-part 
ement which has not okayed the amendments. The 
. county, and state have confirmed them. 
OR Corporate Secretary Hendrix Chandler said the 
rd will not approve the amendments until the use-days 
renegotiated. The 1976 contract gives FSU and FAMU 
ays and 29 nights per year for use of the arena, and 20 
s and 20 nights use of the axed auditorium, 
epresentatives from the BOR, FSU, FAMU and the 
c Center Authority plan to meet with the new civic 
er manager, when chosen by the authority, to 
gotiate use-days. 

jntil a civic center manager is appointed, probably in 
uary. we are on hold," Chandler said. "We can wait 
so long." 



Bne: 



[ANAGlNGTii£ GLOBAL PLANTATION, a slide-tape 
imentary on one of America's largest agri-businesses 
its operation in Hawaii, the Philippines and Latin 
[orica will be shomn tonight at 7 in Rocwn 275 Chemistry 

lure Hall. 

[he people FOR RATIONAL MARIJUANA LAWS 

meet tonight at 8:30 in Room 346 Union to discuss a 
letit at Tommy's, committee reports, and legislative 
kts. New members are invited. 
CONSUMING FIRE: ENCOUNTERS with Elie Wiesel 
the Holocaust, is the topic of a lecture by Dr. John 
King tonight at 8 in Room 201 Diffenbaugh. King will 
host a colloquium on "November Dreams: American 
^riencc Points to the Future" at 3:30 today in the 
d Ministries Center. 548 West Park Ave. 



The resolution, first of the year, cxplams in detail that, 
due to construction delays, the cost of the project has risen 
SI 1 .2 million, while the services oCfe^wd have been severely 

cut. 

A 2.200-seat auditorium and a 1.000-car parking garage 

were axed from the contract. 

Revision 1 contends this is a new contract and, therefore, 
must be voted on and passed by the Student Senate before 
any FSU funds can be used on the project. 



Friedman tnd Drew alio gained aiwoft is teir 

from unexpected sources. 

Both Florid: Technological Univenity and Florida 
Atlantic I nucrMty have agreed to support FSU student 
government atiempu to halt the present contract. The 
Universitv )t Florida's student government was scheduled 
last night to vote on the proposed support issue. FSU 
Student Senator Doug White told Ut piNip UF liatf 
votes to pass it. 




NAfe couldn t 

make our Roost 
Beef Sandwich better, 
so we mode it bigger. 

With 50% more 
tender roost beef, sliced 
thin and piled high and 
juicy, with your choice of 
three sauces, on a toasted 
sesame seed bun. 

\Jse this coupon for a big 
deal on two Big Roast Beef 
Sandwiches. 






® 






SANDWTilES 
ONE LrmJ PRICE 



GET2NEW 

Good at all participating Hardees. Please present this coupon before ordering. 
One coupon per customer, please. Customer must pay any sales tax due 
on the purchase price. This coupon not good in combinotion with any other offers. 



Coupon expres DEC. 15, 1978. 



Itit 1i 



1 1 

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|lll!|lf|! ' 



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9 m. 



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ealth 



to say about pi 

Is wiitt 
of our 
r cmliHi «f 

•yr>lvml, not fo 
liundrcdft of vear 
ycAin more than 

f(> far eiiiited." 
If an indtviiiuai 
)unts of these su 
c blood ceta. 
hoAoocttr. whi < 
termifiti cancers 
rs Sitffldefit ex 
death du 
i; .. > stinal faihi 
trjl ruT\»nis s\ s- 
'hilc lhc.">t ho 



ette 



arter: 

ktor: 

|leccntly. Mr. Cart| 
ih of Iran. Th 
prcscntativc of coi 
otcct the intereN 
lluding ann-prodij 
ihat is a shame 
vcrnmeiit approve si 
p as the shah's. H 
p anymore. Thri 
lionalist forces is 
|f American peop 
bing and aiding th 
lother war is ahea 
ly Iranians (alcho 
led) but American- 
least ^>0.000 Amen 
f huge amount of t. 
A^ar should not be 
time thi 
the Cart 
nother int< 



'icket 1 



e lines to eichar 
e football games 
year: first coose. t| 
•eattf On Moodj 
ks for tidkets and 
to ^ ctoaer to tht 
eonponsdidn^ 
y before I was able 
yenr's system a 
pnofNe tfe gc> 



medial 



:m«Ki«M'»i>nm'ir|ii>iimn 



IBIiiililliH 



FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Thnr<;ri;iv ^Jovpm^pr 16, 1978 / 5 



althways 



sion 



le increasingly cqbcu- 
For instaoce, tle^ 
ktratkm of a radioactive' 
|nce in the algae of a streto 
low, but a fish can at t 
leal of algae. Hence, Ike 
Kration in the fish is 
than in the algae. Iki 
tomes another fish that oti 
of the algae-eating fishes, 
in turn could be a comn 
|r people. This same type of 
iship exists between gnss 
|ws, and cows and people, 
exists between grains and 
)les and people. Unfar- 
)y , at the end of the chainin 
(are are people, and once 
ladioactive substances find 
'ay inside a human bodf 
good can come of it. 

[ways in which theeffecttrf 

ion contamination ffe 
st biologically depe^ 
the chemical form of 
>tive substance one m 
Ixposed to. Take strontiuin- 
lis radioisotope resen*» 
n in chemical structure lifl 
luently migrates to tne 
Iwhere it is known tocau^ 
cancer and leuice««»^ 
131 is metabolized in ft^ 
anner as elementah^ 
Iconcentrated in theth^ 
here it is known toca«se 
Plutonium-239 (na' 

the most toxic sub »^ 

to humanity. I. 
: with the atmosphere ^ 
Uhed into the lung^ « 
, the lungs. Pl"«'"'fj;i 

Ihout the body lea^ J 
trail of cellula^/.„ 



uiar biologist and Nobel laureate, had 
''t" sav about plutonium: 

fear that when the history of tkls 
#ntur> is written, that the greatest 
jel tu ie of our nation will be seen to be 
creation of vast armadas of pluto- 
im, whose safe containment will rep- 
»ent a major precondition for human 
inival, not for a few decades or 
indreds of years, but for thousands of 
iars more than hiunaii civliiaatioii 1mm 
far existed." 

an individual is exposed to minute 
flints of these substances a decrease in 
It blood cells, fatigue, nausea, and 
hca occur, while the incubation period 
germinal cancers can range from 15 to 40 
rs Sufficient exposure can result in a 
jdier death due to blood disorders, 
trointtstinal failure, and damage to the 
trai nervous system, 
hile these horrid effects are quite 



enough to support a case for a nuclear 

power moratorium, there are still oth« 
damages that must be considered. These 
arc the damages due to genetic mutation. 
Ionizing radiation also effects the body's 
reproductive material. It damages our 
future generations through gene and 
chromosomal mutation. Genetic damages 
are more difficult to study because it may 
take several generations before the damage 
becomes apparent. However. Nobel prize 
winning geneticist H.J. MuUer sliowed that 
nuclear radiation does cause genetic 
damage, which becomes apparent in 
descendants of those exposed to the 
radiation. These experiments were 
conducted in the 1920s, which illustrates a 
great social irresponsibility on the part of 
government, utility companies, anj the 
nuclear industry. 

"Experts" who use perverse analogies 
comparing radioactive materials to chemical 



poisons or combustible fsels are 

ooraiNMimUng the ignorance of m tUnm&y 
uninformed and misled public. Dr. loger 
McCulkwgh, once a member of the advtaofy 

ocmunittee to the U.S. Atomic Energy 
Cdmnussion said that, "radioactive poisons 
are a million to a billioB times more 
hazardous than chemical poisons." Also, 
we find that when comparing chemical 
poisons to radioactive substances, the 
terrible environmental effects of chemical 
poisons are — given a chance — reversible, 
and are therefore temporary. Whereas, 
when dealing with radioactive by-products 
of fission we are dealing with substances 
that remain deadly for up to 500,000 years. 

An emotional issue? Yes, by its nature 
the nuclear power issue is quite emotional. 
It would be absurd to pretend that this 
controversy is purely technical. 

The nuclear industry issue is a conflict of 
morals and values. It is an issue that 



demands the responsible formation of 
o|»nlons. Theie Is a greet ilsel el 
iitformatioa in prlirt en this issse* Ce-ep 
Books, a few mumtes wA fnm canpos, 

has a comprehe^lve leiectkm of books, 

articles, aad research do cemeats eoooem- 

ing nuclear power. We all use eaeigy dally. 

and ultimately we cannot twc&pe om 

re / asilHfity for the energy paths om 

governments take. At this point in time, to 

say nothing about nuclear power is to say 

yes to nuclear power. At this point in time. 

to say no to nuclear pomei may be the most 

important thing you can do. 

• • • 

Today, Nov. 16. there will be a rally at 
Lewis Park on Park Street for the Caravan 
for a Non-Nuclear Future starting at 4:30 
p.m. and lasting until 6:30. at which time 
these will be a covered dish (bring a dish) 
dinner. There will be guest speakers and 
entertainment. 



farter: Corporate tool 

tor: 

iecently, Mr. Carter supported the Royal Butcher, the 
of Iran. That is not surprising. He, as a 
resentative of corporate powers, will do his best to 
hxi the interests of American giant corporations 
|uding arm-producing ones. 

|hat is a shame for American democracy that U.S. 
[emment approves the most bloody regime of the world 
as the shah's. But supporting the King is not an easy 
anymore. The movranent of progressive and 
ionalist forces is started now and can't be stopped. 
American people don't protest against die policy of 
ling and aiding the shah, they wiU have to pay for It. 
>ther war is ahead in the near future. The lives of not 
Iranians (atthough thousands have already been 
?d) but Americans loo are on the stake. Remember that 
ast 60,000 Americans woe killed in Vietnam. Besides, 
[huge amount of tai whidi wiU be imposed in die case 
^ar should not be ignored. 

lope this time die American public will be more aware 
to let the Carta* admialstralicm invohre the United 
tes in another intematkmal war: die war between just 
unjust. 



resulting 



forms 



iia 



lar debris, 
Mid other 

It is ^^''"lof 

that one-^.^ 
f plutonium-2.^v 

er once ins'^^ >\'atson. 



icket lines ridicuous 

itoii 

le lines to exchange coupons of tickets to the Florida 
te football games are ridiculous. Why can't it be like 
year: first come, first served, before the game for the 
it seats? On Monday I went to exchange two coupon 
)ks for tickets and all I was offered were rows 70 up. I 
to sit closer to the field and people coming up with 30 
lore coupons did not help my chances. I had to coax the 
ly before I was able to get row 7. Why can't we go back 
last year's system and stop the hassles? For the Florida 
e. people are going to camp out just to ezdiange 
ts. 

Barry Butln 



Dr. James 



D. 



\um to 



HBALTH^ 




9a.m. to3p.m. 
m. 314 University Union * 



typesetting, layout Et 
paste-' lo services 

644-5744 



American 
Cancer 
Society 

We \\. ant to cure cancer 
in vour liletimc. 




WE'RE FIGHTING 

on' 

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SIS 



liy dennis mulquMii 

ftambMtf staff writer 

In the wake of one of the most 
predictable general elections ever 
(save the unexpected defeat of all 
eight consitution revisions), one 
important observation can be 
made: Florida is still a cautious and 
improgressive state, interested in 
preserving the status quo. 

From the gubernatorial race to the 
revisions, Floridians voted unani- 
mously to postpone change. 

Eckard, the unknown quantity, 
was rejected in favor of the state's 
new caretaker, Bob Graham. 
Revision 2, more commonly 
referred to as the state ERA, was 
turned back in light of its well 
grocmied image as the aegis of 
homosezaality. 

Reform of the state's bail system 

was declined so as to keep untold 
aanbers <rf viotont criminals from 
foaa^B^ tlM streets unchecked. An 
appmsted Board of Education was 
rejected in order to prevent another 
layer of tHtreauaacy isolated from 
tiw people and appointed by 
politicians. 

The above IhesMS, alfhou^ 
inaccurate, were prevalent in 
aati-revisioB ads. At&um^ nega* 
tive and distorted ads sodi as these 



were probably a factor, it was 
neither them nor voter naivete 
which prompted the across the 
board rejection. Floridians simply 
wanted things left alone. 

Four of the defeated revisions 
had one thing in common; they 
would have reduced the number of 
elected officials and increased the 
number of appointed officials. 

Revision 4 would have abolished 
the Cabinet and replaced it with an 
appointed body; revision 5 would 
have made the PSC an appointed 
body; revision 6 would have made 
the state's trial judges appointive, 
(as Florida's appelate judges are 
now) and revision 8 called for an 
appointed state board of education. 

The message might be most 
obvious in the outcome of the 
gubernatorial contest. The similar- 
ities between Reubin Askew and 
Bob Graham are more than casual. 

Both men catapulted from the 
relative obscurity of the state 
legislature to the governor's 
mansion on a '*good guy" media 
image. Graham's overwhelming 
defeats of Bob Shevin in the 
Democratic primary and Eckerd in 
the general election were made 
possible by the voters* perception 
of the man as a s(Xft-spoken, 




The similarities 
beivveen Askew (left) 
and Graham (right) are 
more than casual. 



nncere, and capable politician. 

The fatherly image of Askew ^ 
aptly mirrored in the soft-shoe style 
of Graham. Both are laid-back 
politicians who emanate an aura of 
utmost dedication and trustworth- 
iness. Both exude the highest 
moral and Christian standards. 

Both are deeply religious and 
active in their respective churches. 
Askew is a strict teetotaler, and 
although Graham does take an 
occasional social drink, neither 
smoke. 

Both men, concurrent with their 
political savvy, enjoy amicable 
relationships with the press. 
Hardly a single reporter had that 
type of rapport with the introverted 
and defensive ^ckerd. 

Graham casually joked with the 
press and on occasion, had a drink 
with them. Eckerd was paranoid of 
*the press and seldom accessible. 

Askew's ability to communicate 
with and get along with people 



extended to his relationship with 
the l^idature, wifli the esKeption 
of former Senate President 
Dempsey Barron. 

Graham, having been In tiie 
legislature for 12 yca«, w«s openly 
endorsed before his victory by both 
incoming legislative leaders, Phil 
Lewis in the Senate, and Hyatt 
Brown in the House. 

More importantly, the departing 
governor and tiie govcmor-rfect 
have taken similar stands on 
issues. 

Askew and Graham both 
vehemently oppose legalized casi- 
nos. Both are hard-liners on crime 
matters, highly supportive of 
education, and tax reform-minded. 

Bob Graham, while certainly 
more liberal than Eckerd, nonethe- 
less represented the status quo to 
Florida voters following the Askew 
years. The vote for Graham, like 
the rejection of the constitution 
revisions, was a vote for no change. 



Ethics Commission 



by dennis mulqueen 

flambeau staff writer 

The Ethics Commission was 
urged by its staff yesterday to seek 
means to punish corrupt public 
officials rather than just make 
recommendations. 

Larry Gonzalez, executive direc- 
tor of the Commission, urged 
members of the legislative revision 
committee to request legislation 
giving the Commission the 
authority to reprimand officials 
guilty of misconduct. Currently, 
the Commission can only recom- 
mend punishment to the appropri- 
ate agency. 

The revision committee, com- 
posed of Commission Chairperson 
Joel Gustafson. and members 
Robert Shellenberg, Don Middle- 
brooks, and Earl Dixon, will submit 



a list of recommendations to the 
legislature before the 1979 session 
begins. 

The Commission can recommend 
disciplinary action in its investiga- 
tive reports, but can take no action 
on its own. Officials indicted for 
corruption can be removed from 
office and are subject to a fine of up 
to $5,000. 

Gonzalez recommended giving 
the Commission the power to 
reprimand and censure and that 
the attorney general be given the 
specific authority to collect civil 
fines levied against corrupt 
officials. 

"We ought to speak out strongly 
on violations of the law," Gonzalez 
said. **If we're going to be doing 
that, we ought to get specific 
authority to do it.*' 



The Commission now operates 
under two separate sets of rules, 
one delineating the body's 
constitutional function, and the 
other oiUlijning its statutory 
duties. F9^||ncial disclosure and a 
standards of conduct law comprise 



the bulk of the panel's statutory 
responsibility, while its consitu- 
tional function, under the Sunshine 
Amendment which went into effect 

in January of 1977, to investigate 
cases of '^breach of public trust." 



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I 






Counterclockwise 

Sara/i VahnHne, kmuansymfMNxer, 
gfV0sfingm^Whecki»;unk /entiS $d 

paddywagon; dummies ofAten OuKm 
{/eft) wHi the shah of Ifan prior to the 
effigy-iHiming incident that sparked 
violence; student Mves American flag 
while mocking Iranian demonstmtors. 



photo by robert o'lary 



Arrested ^ 



brdce \aim and grabbed an Iranian 
protester, accordinf to witnesses. Other 
officers Mowed him. 

The elegies fcU to the ground, and one oil 
soaked duflUBy burst into flames. 

There were coirfHctliig reports of who 
ignited the likenesses, some witnesses 
claiming students torched it and others 
saying an miktentified police officer did it. 

Wh^ some students tried to extinguish 
the fire with handfols of peW>les. others 
rushed to h^ the Iranian who had been 
seized by the officer. 

fmndolhesniett immedialety converged 
on the prote^ers who had ei^efed Ae 
hedged area and began grilling with 
them. One studeirt took off past the 
University Store entrance wifli as officer In 
pursuit. 

As uniformed police arrived and diased 
observers back, plaindotfiesinen wrcsHed 
two Iranians to the ground. Eadi Irttdan 
was sat on by one officer and hdd in a 
stranglehold by another. Both were purple 
faced and gasping for breatii. One tried to 
lift his head, but officers hit him repeatedly 
in the face and tightened their hold. Blood 
flowed from his mouth and nose. 

Asked what they were attempting to do 
by a reporter, the police refused to answer. 
Two female students leapt into the fracas 
and tried to pry the policemen's arms off of 
the captured Iranians' necks, but were 
pushed away. 

Several witnesses — both Iranians and 
their American supporters — pointed to a 
curly-haired FSU investigator, later 
identified as Ronald E. Moat, alleging he 
choked a demonstrator so severely that he 
had to be restrained by his fellow officers. 
When they tried to hold him back, he 
struggled out of his coat and resumed 
fighting. 

"He just slung off his jacket and said, 



woman 



you motherfuckers, 
said. Others confirmed Z, 
descriptioD of Moat*s behavior 

**He had one of the Persians aroinij tw 
throat and was choking him. * FSU stu^e- 
Lee Norton said, pointing to Moat i * 
screaming. Stop, let him go." Aiooenu- 
may have grabbed his arm. " ' 

As uniformed police arrested 
demonstrator, who allegedly ran fron ^ 
scene of the aborted effigy-burmao 
another student ran into Moore Auditorilni 
and told a group listening to activist Fk 
Kennedy that police were beitag tke 
demonstrators. 

Kennedy and entourage left th« 
auditcxrium and went to the uaioa, vkot 
police and demonstrators were violeath 
shoving each other, appareittiy ^ 
arresting Nasstt. 

Kenedy <^»erved for a few Bana. 
then returned to Moore to finidi kertik. 

Officer W.D. Johnson suffered a est over 
his left eye in the fracas. Another 
received a cot mi his leg. 

"I'm oiuiy; we're afl okay; oothiig bit i 
few bruises and skinned kanckles.' 
Johnson said laler. 

The focus of attention moved near it 
ftont of the Oncost cafeteria, where i 
appeared police were ushering tke 
remaining students under arrest tfaroegk a 
alley ii^ waiting police cars for trtasportit 
the Leon Coimty Jail. 

The sequence of events feadng to the 
other arrests, however, was undev. 

FSU police made all of the arrests, bi 
spokesperson Jim SeweU could not be 
reached last night to say whether arrests 
were in fact being made whei 
demonstrators and onlookers gathered aev 
the Outpost. 

As about a dozen Tallahsssee Pbfice aii 
Leon County Sheriffs deputies arrived 



turn to ARRESTED, page S 



photo by joyce hanMr 

0 




the ()iitp*"» 
i^r.ispet1 II 
Btgdcti a 
Bigdi il 
toward 

thr <->fft ( T 

yon are. i' 
can talk t< 

of the Nt4)r 

"But 
persisted 
speech." 

He pulh 
a table he 

•i just 

Messer 
someplace! 
yoy don't 
jaU. • 

By this 
speaker* V 
••We ll ta 

"You w 
Messer a 

Bigdelj 
to talk t 
chanted. 

Messer 
onlookers 

-Let's 
Director • 
attemptio; 
onlookers 

Deputit 
nightstick 
p.m. until 
and a In 
pholof^l 



UiVl 





fr^ confirmed he, 

I nenavior. 

Persians aroaiid tkt 
k himr FSU stadcat 
[ting to Kfoat. **{ ^ 

m go/ At one time I 
arm.** 

)olice arrested a 
tiegedly ran fipom the 
[ned cfRgy-buming 
"ito Moore Auditwhini 
^ning to activist Flo 
beating the 

mtourage left the 
to tlie union, where 
rators were violently 
Ir. apparently whUe 

for a few minutes. 
>re to finish her talk 
son suffered a cut over 
racas. Another officer 
leg. 

ill okay; nothing but a 
[skinned knuckles," 

ition moved near the 
cafeteria, where it 
'ere ushering the 
Inder arrest through an 
Ice cars for transport to 

[events leading to the 
ler, was unclear, 
all of the arrests, but 
iSewell could not be 
say whether arrests 
»eing made when 
gathered near 

iTallahassee Police and 
s deputies arrived near 



\RRESTED, page 9 




NovwnlMr te. 1918 / 9 



Arrested 



from |Mig« 9 



the Ootpost, city poiiceiiiaii Edwaid Measer 
grasped Iranian spokesperson Abdol AM 
Bigdeli and asked to talk to him. 

Bigdeli vohintarily waUrad with Messer 
toward Woodw an d Street, hut questioiied 
the officer's intent. 

Messer replied. "I just want to know who 
you are. Vm taking you someplace where I 
can taft to you and you can toll me your nde 
of the story." 

**But where are we gcnng . . . ?" Bigdeli 
persisted, 'i want to go back and finidi my 
speech." 

He pulled away and headed back toward 
a table he had used as a lectern. 

'i just want to know who you are/* 
Messer insisted. *'I want to come 
someplace where I can talk to you. But if 
you don't come with me, I'll put you in 
jail." 

By this time. Bigdeli was back at the 
speaker's table clutching a megaphone. 
"We'll talk right here," 

"You want all these people in on this?" 
Messer asked. 

Bigdeli told the crowd the officer wanted 
to talk to them. ''Speak, speak," they 
chanted. 

Messer exchanged a few words with 
onlookers and walked away. 

"Let's go home for the day," urged 
Director of Student Affairs Bob Kimmel, 
attempting to disperse the growing crowd of 
onlookers. 

Deputies in riot helmets and police with 
nightsticks ringed the Union from about 1 
p.m. until 3, encircling the demonstrators 
and a large platoon of reporters and 
photographers. 




THE P 






NEVER 




The people united 

. . . Iranians supporters 



'This is stupid. Who wants these gu>s in 
this country? We don't want them here, 
one oidooker muttered about the Iranians. 
"Look, they thmk the U.S. is agamst them, 
right? Well, that's good." 

i don't go over there and scream about 
Carter, they shouldn't come over here and 
scream about the shah." another young 
man inteijectod. 

As the demonstrators continued their 
(Enunciation of the shah, about 30 students 
perched near the eastern edge of the Union 
broke into repartee . . . "Go to hell. Gators, 
go to hell." 

Several students waving American flags 
joined about 40 other students in singing 
the national anthem and taunting the 
demonstrators, who were sitting in front of 
the Union store soliciting people to join 
what had become a sit-in as police cordoned 
off the demonstrators from the crowd of 
curious and sometimes hostile onlookers. 

Around 2:15 p.m., the demonstrators 
retrieved the effigies, one of them partially 
charred, from a trash can and began to 
display them once again, prompting FSU 
Director of Security William Tanner to call 
for a fire truck. 

"This is not a crowd control 
mechanism," Sewell said as a pumper 
rumbled into the Union, in front of the 
bookstore. "They have a gasoline-soaked 
effigy that could be dangerous." 

As a protester hurled insults at the police 
for the appearance of the truck, several 
students intermittently blurted, "Hose 
them, hose them." 

But no deluge followed. The confronta- 
tion between the Iranian supporters and 
opponents degenerated into a loudspeaker 
debate in which the situation in Iran was 
compared to that in Vietnam before 
American troops stepped in. 

The fire truck left, the police barricade 
dissolved and crowd members began to 
drift away. Rally organizers called for a 
march to Westcott Administration Building 
around 3:30 p.m., and about 100 persons 
hiked across campus to confront 
administrators about the plight of those 
arrested. 

FSU President Bernard Sliger was out of 
the building attending a faculty meeting, 
but Kimmel and campus police met the 
group on the front steps of Westcott. 

Chief Tanner told the protesters that FSU 
had no power to free the imprisoned nine. 
Vice President for Student Affairs Bob 
Leach, returning from a conference in St. 
Louis, rushed from the airport to the scene 
«id met in his office with Bigdeli and two 
women. 

Leach urged the crowd to disperse, to no 
avail. Protesters remained on the steps until 
it became clear die prisoners would not he 
released without bond last night, at one 



PASTIME 

NIGHT OWL ROOST PRESENTS 

IRIDAY Nin 

CROSSCUT SAW 

SATURDAY Nin 



Police barrier 

. . . FSU Security, Tallahassee Police and Leon County Sheriff's offhers form a 

barricade to keep onlookers and demonstrators apart 

time passing a bag to collect $236 toward 

bonds. 

Bringing in doughnuts and water, the 
group stayed until after 7 p.m. as Leach and 
the delegates telephoned the Sheriff s office 
about the prisoners. 

Then most of the protesters moved to the 
Bellamy Building to plan a defense strategy 
and this morning s picket at the courthouse. 

Sheriff's department spol^esperson 



Wayne Smith said last night that the 
persons in jail were in nood health and 
could contact attorneys il they desired to 
prepare cases. 

**But they don't really need to prepare 
their arguments yet." he added. "The 
initial court appearance is mainly to have 
the charges explained. " Bonds could be 
raised or lowered at this time. Smith said, 
and trial dates may be set. 



I 

I 

i 



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Anti-nuke caravan arrives 
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t 



14 / Thursday, November 16, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



I 



I 




I 



I. 
I 





•if*' III 



III 



It 



%'||#^{ 




Arts /Features 



'Streamers' is a grim reminder 




Review 



by sky« camiiMI 



Recently, a friend disclosed to me that he and I were 
sixties bumoots. Drugs, and commitment were the culprits, 
he inssted. After viewing the Studio Theatre's production 
of David Ridie^s NT Critic's Award-winning ''Streamers;" I 
would have to insist that we were hardly touched. 

Those who were truly burned out were not those 
committed to telling the truth abouth the situation in Viet 
Nam, but those who waited in unsure torment to give their 
lives in a war they did not expect, or understand. 

* 'Streamers" is set in Norfolk, Virginia in 1965. The 
setting is an angular, stark barracks room where three men 
are housed. Ritchie, played by Mark Monaghan, is a 
displaced person from Manhattan, who both flaunts and is 
haunted by his homosexuality. Billie is a "Happy Days" 
face from the mid-west: liberal, well-educated and 
sensitively portrayed by Kevin Lacke. Roger is a black 
"good soldier" whose interactions with the others is 
high-spirited rhetoric designed to keep their lives tolerable. 
Tyrone G. Jones in the role of Roger has a masterful touch, 
and is perhaps the most endearing of the characters. 

The oppressive hierarchy of the armed services is most 



potently portrayed by Bill Smith as Cariyle, a victhn of the 
military system. An underlying feelmg of tenskm travels 
with Cariyle thnxighout the ^tire play. Billie, Roger, and 
Ritchie support each other with a friendly veneer of 
normalcy. Their high, good spirits are cut short however by 
Ritchie's pervasive acting out of his gay feelings, and tl» 
appearance of Cariyle, a sensual and alienated blad[ man 
who feels a poignant sense of loss of home and personbood. 

The men are also constantly harrassed by the sergeants 
Rooney, played by Wendell C6Dlns, and Cokes, played by 
William Sevedge, Jr. These irresponsible characters have 
complete control over the men, and can intrude into their 
itdse security and privacy at any hour with stories of combat, 
that would be much better left forgotten. 

Streamers are parachutes that don't open, carrying those 
encumbered by them to their deaths. Each of the characters 
in "Streamers" is a streamer on his way down. 

Although this production, directed by Richard Tempista, 

is not for the squeamish, I highly recommend it to those who 

may have forgotten the brutality of war waged by forces not 

quite understood. One play in a trilogy by David Rabe which 

also includes "The Basic Training of Pablo Hummel" and 

"Sticks and Bones," "Streamers" will be playing tonight 

through Saturday. Go and see it . . . lest we forget. 

• * • 

"Streamers" will play tonight through Saturday in the 
Studio Theater, Room 119 Williams. Curtain time is 8:15 
p.m. Admission is free. 




Bill §0y(gj;£|g|i 

... in the cffmactic finale of "Stmmm" 



Finally a board game for bored Marxists 



liy mv« doNwr 



Look out NffltoD-Bradley, the revolu- 
timi is coming. Monc^x^, the world's 
most famous boanl game, may have met 
its m»tdi. 

At least that's what the creator of a 
new Karl Man-meets-Marvin Gardens 
board game is claiming. 

Class Struggle, designed and created 
by Bertell (MIman, a professor at New 
York l^i^erslty and a highly regarded 
politica] theorist and Mandst, pits 
cafHtali^ against workers and four 
sub-classes, in an ongoing eoonmnk and 



political confrontation. 

Ollman said he invented the game 
because he had "been rather depressed 
that games ^e Monopoly, Rat Race and 
Easy Money promoted greed and power 
trips. ' ' So he sought to create a game that 
explains socialism. 

Instead of collecting property titles, 
advancing to Go or landing in jail, the 
players in **Gass Struggle" collect 
assets and debits and are bandied about 
the board by chance elements oi social 
and economic reality. 

For instance, should a capitalist land 
his top-hat tokenonone of many Qumce 




squares, he might be faced with this: 

**Your son has become a foflower ^ 
Reverend Moon and your daughter is 
hodied on heroin. So what good is afi 
your money? Worrying about it all cai^s 
you to forget yoor next turn at the dice.*' 
On the other hand, a woiicer m^t face 
a cUfferent sort of problem: 

*Tou get caught stealing food from the 
supermarket. You get 30 days in jail and 
are ordered to move back one space. 
Stealing is no answer to the problem of 
poverty." 

The goal of the game, or struggle 
rather, is to collect more assets and fewer 
debits than your oppcment by the time the 
final ccmfrontation arrives. If the Workers 
win, its the start of a social^ state. 
Should the Capitalists land on the 
Niu^r War Square, however, it's all 
over. 

As the rules state, "Capitidists in 
danger of losing their power are capable 
of anything," which means, of coarse, 
automatic atomic war and the end of the 
game. 

Just as in real life, nobody wins. In 
fact, (HIman has designed his whole game 
to fit in with real fife. 

Since statistics show tkat less women 
and blacks are in big business, the die 
toss that begms the game starts with 
priority given to the lightest white male 
player, mi down to the darkest black 
female player, each rolling the genetic 
die to decide whkfa cfass ^ey wHI be bom 
in, capitalist, worker, student, farmer, 
small business professional. 

Though up to six may play, only the 
two major classes may win. Members of 



the four sub-classes succeed only by 
ayying themselves with the wimiig 
major dass. 

Haftmott Ramm, a worker at Co-op 
Books, the only store m town that stocks 
the game, says that 24 of the store's 36 
copies of the game have 9fM in the last 
three nontfis. 

"Afl kin^ of people have bought it." 
Raiiim said, i^scounting the idea thtt 
''Dass Struggle" would only appeal to 
those with Marxist leanings. 

'*I think most people have an tnkliog 
that there is something (Bffetent about 
the game, it treats reality as a kind of 
variadon on. Marx's basic theme," he 
said. 

At $10.75 (list price $11.95). Oass 
Struggle is a bit higher than 
MUton-Bradley's standard $6.99 for 
Monopoly. 

A ripe Capitalist price for a game that 
espouses imaginatve Marxism? 

Maybe. The game has been the biggest 
seller at New York's Bloomindalcs for a 
couple of months now. Yet, Ramm says 
the higher cost may be due to the limited 
producton oi the game. 

'it's produced by an independtni 
company formed solely to promote the 
game," Ramm said. The fact that Class 
Struggle is a new game may also explain 
the price, he aikied. 

Nonetheless, the game should mate for 
some interesting play on those late winter 
evenings. After all, when was die ^ 
time you could nuclearly obliterate your 
opp(^nents and yourself in the battle fot 
cLoiiomic equality? 



Winters 
Bros. 

play 
tonight 



imoA " 



November 16, 1978 15 





Brothers Band 



toy 



Sotttbetn-fock iMmd, The Winters Brothers, win bring 
tlieff country-flavoted rock and rofl to FSU loil^lit ^ 8 for 
a free concert on ttm Union Green. 

Hie group performed here last spring, opening for 
Oufffie DanMs, and has released one self-tiM aftwn« 

The brothers, wiio- are n6 relation to Edgar or Johnny 
Winter, grew up in Nashville and got most of their musical 
training there. Their big break came when Daniels 
befriended them, and hdped gain the broth er s a recording 
contract. 

Dmiiels, who has been a major ins{^ration lotfie group, 
indttded #wm on his "Vohmteer Jam — Vohtmes m 



IV" IP tiiat was recorded h»t year. 

Danieb reportedly told tiie band to "say what you have 
to say in a song." 

Apparently that did the trick. 

The group has appeared with Marshafl Thicker, Lynyrd 
Skynyrd, Wffiie Nelson, Bob Soger and Robert Palmer, 
amcmg others. 

**Our music is hard to cat^orize," bassist Gene Watson 
has said. "One of our tunes wiH have a real fnnky-fike 
bottom, and flien we turn around and have a county thang 
— then we*tt do a three<liord boogie number." 

Judging from crowd reactkm at Tully Gym last year, the 
Winters Brothers should supply enough southern boogie 
to satisfy every shtt-kicker in town. And stale workers, too. 



Burroughs will speak here Monday 



liy kM ImnMidogkl 



WiUiam, not Edgar Rice. For diose of you who are 
confused: Edgar Rice Burroughs wrote about hatf-dothed 
men, one ^A fHiom was named Tarzan, swhiging through 
the jungle on vines. WIffiam writes about undodied reality 
and addiction, societal and biological. Edgar is .at best a 
cult fignre; William, a mainstay of the literary 
avant-gaide. 

M^iam Seward Bunou^s ID was bora Feb. 5, 1914 in 
St. Louis to the Burrouglis adding madime funily. He was 
educated at HarvMd, and on graduatkm worked brief^ at 
an advertising firm. He was disdiarged from the Army in 
1942, and began his 14-year stint as a heroin addict in 
1944. Since that time, he has traveled to South America, 
North Africa and Europe, has been married twice, and has 
written smne 15 works, inducing seven novels. Of those 
novels. Naked Lnndi is his best known. 

Though Burrongbs' work is rarely taught and his work 
released and accepted without the pomp and drcurastance 
of, say, a Michener or a Wallace^ he had made and 
continues to make his presence felt in literary drdes and 
in the other arts. 

In Naked Lmeh, Burrou^s' departures from and 
hmovations with the form of the novd and his fragmented 
style of colliding associative and hallucinatory imagery 



inn-triguing 
Offer. 



prmnpted Norman Mafler to write that Burroughs was 
''the only American novelist Uvmg today who may 

conceivably be possessed by genius." Jack Kerouac 
proclaimed that, * 'Burroughs is the greatest satirical writer 
since Jonathan Swift." 

Aside from his own writing. Burroughs has influenced 
and collaborated with a wide range of artists. He worked 
with Alan Ginsberg on The Yage Letters, a book the two 
authored on the esoteric South American drug. He was 
influential among the American expatriates Paul Bowles, 
etc., in Tangiers. Steely Dan took their name from a dildo 
in Naked Lunch. A London punk group. Dead Fingers 
Talk, named itself after his 1%3 novel. He stared from the 
cover of a Rolling Stone in which he and David Bowie 
engaged in a cross-interview/discussion. He has worked 
with the Rolling Stones and Patti Smith. And even a group 
like Firefall, as far as it is from anything avant-garde, has 
borrowed a Burroughs character, Izzy the Push. 

Throughout, Burroughs' major interest has been 
control, and the d^radatkm and ddiumanization tiiat 
control injects ii^ our Kves. The contnrfs of tags, of 
linear discourse, of words, of government, of the entire 
Aristotelian construct, of the news media, and the means 
of escape from the various bondages of these Jaoets of 
modern life are his subjects. 




^ NOV 16-B 

815 PM II9WILUAMS 

FREE to Sfcjden*'- .-. t\^ \ ? 15 J qeneralpUic 

FOR AAATURE AUDIENCCS 




I 



f 

Si % 

II 





I ■ . • I I 

I • 



r 



In. 





Reynaud has troops hard at work preparing 
for regionals in Lakeland this weekend 



by gerald ensley 

' 'We've been working for six hoitn a day since Aog. 28 

just for this toumameat." 

Whiie FSU head voflcyball coach Cecflc Revnaud may. 
in light of her team's successful 23-9 record this year, be 
overstating the case, there s no doubt that this weekend s 
regional tournament, in Lakeland, is ver> important. 
Though her team advanced to the regionals last year, 
where ii finished fourth. FSL' has never made it to the 
national tournament. A first or second place finish in the 
regional tournament is required to advance to the 
nationals, held in Tu^'.a>^ sa. Ala.. Dec. 6-8. 

Officially kno^* as *- sscKiation of Intercollegiate 
Athletics for Women (AlAWy Region III tournament, the 
meet wiJl feature the top two teams from four states, 
Alabama. Mississippi, Georgia and Florida. Indaded this 
year will be last year's champioo, AlalKuna, md 
runner-up, Mississippi. Based on regular season match 
records, Ole Miss is seeded first for this tourney, with FSU 
and Alabama following. FSU has already beaieB Ole Miss 
this year, fliff^iBlar samoo, tkongli fell two wtOa M90 to 
Alabama. 

The eight teams win be divided into two pools, playing a 
round robin series, with the top two teams in eadi pool 
emerging to play a single dimtnation toomev'. The 
pr^minaries will feature best of tlifee matdies. wh^e the 
finals win require winners to capture three of five games. 

If that happens then only one matdi (becaose of the 
single elimination format with but foor teams) will stand 
between FSU and the national toomamait. As that has 
been Reynaud 's goal for three yean, one can believe her 
stat ement. **TlBis is the big 




ft 
SHOP 






ACKSONVILXE 904 724<6r.2 



GIN NOV 27 



Nancy Townsend Qeft), Vehna Wright 

. . . head for regionai after state victory 



Cagers meet Australians 




CM 
REVIEW 



FSU will preview its "new" basketball 
Seminotes when tet-year head coach Joe 
Wifliams' cagers Uee Ac Aoslndian 
aatioiial diaspios. Sooth Aoitnfii^ la as 



Upoff #Bie in Tatty Gym is 8:05 p.m. 

"Thtt is a young team dial mnst frfay as 
■may outside games as possible to get 
ready for tbe ti^gnlar aeaaoii/' says 
WSfianw, who is starting Ms first year wiMi 
the GaammAGm. "NCAA ndes attov 
m to piiqr o«e t ■hjiiiiim game di^mg the 
•easoo and with oor dob being so yooag 
, we woold be foolirii to do otbetwise." 

Veteran Seminole atgfi feBowcfi won't 
mnogmze this squad. 

ft befina wflk Wnbms and his fidMime 
• aiiitanta Bobby Dataon and John Jones 
pins part-time assistant Frank Gflmoce. AH 
are new to the FSU staff. Wffliams, Dolson 
and Jones weie afl together at Forman teat 
a ea s o n whfle Glfanofe, bfotfier of the 
Clric^ Bidb' Attis, was piling bai hi 
EOfope. 

. That, however, is jnst part of die 
"newness" sorroon^ng the S eminol e s . 

At t^Niff against tiie Anstrafians, there 
win be jnst one player who started m tost 
season's NCAA pteycrff game with eventual 
chanipion Kentocfcy. That- is 6-0 point 

' guard Tony Jadtaen. who led die Metro 
Coitfefenoe hi asaiots (166) and steate (73) 
last season. 

Jackson witt be joined at the second 
guard slot by Mickey Dillard. last season's 
aeoond leading scorer with a 13.7 average. 

•The guards, who are both juniors, will 
serve as co-captains for this year's team. 




I Country Uvkig * 

* in Town » 

•X> t Bedroom $131 ^ 

* 2 Bedroom $149 * 

J Astoria Arms * 

* Apts. 

* 2303 Hartsfield Rd. 
S (off of High Rd.) 

* 386-1565 



ABAC AUTO PARTS 



••••••••• 




DiUard 

. . ¥viU start against Austraiiarts ton^ht 

Williams has named one other starter for 
the eihibition. That will be 6-8 junior 
Murray Brown, who is slated to see action 
in the low post. 

Sophomores Ed Chatman (6-3) and 
James Bozeman (6-5) are conApetinglor t|e 
sUrting wing slot. 




AMERICAS 
FRESHEST ICE CREAM 

1 10 

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11 - 11 

Fri. Sat 
11 AM - 12 PM 



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BARGE 



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^AMERICAS' 
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■Mac 
1» W. lENN 
1114714 



I 
♦ 
I 
I 
I 
♦ 



FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Thursday No 



IEGINNOV27 




VIS! 






"I USED fD I 

S OF A LESS R' 'JNG BEER. 



I ALSO HAD VISIONS Of GEHING RESPEQ. 

uH WILL, 1 OUT Or 2 Alii 1 zmKt 



Fomous Gmedion 




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E VERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED 

IN A BEER. AND LESS. 




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tiai 

This aftcrr 
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its season a 
embarlLing ui 
considerablv 
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Friday, when 
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for a 2 p .m 

FSU head 
second seaso 
tliia weeketK' 
as a posit 1 
freshman dorj 
•'Eleven « 1 
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looking at 
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of age.** 

Last year 
season, 9-2 
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the Metro 
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Stafford, 
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Early kickoff makes television tempting 



by Sidney bedingfiold 

flambeau sports editor 

When the television crews roil into Campbell Stadium 
Saturday, and ABC announcers Jim Lampley and Steve 
Davis settle into the press box preparing for their voices 
to be projected into about half of the living rooms in the 
southern United States, I suppose I'll be up there 
covering the game with them. 

Not that I actually want to be up there, since I could 
easily stay in my comfortable chair at home, drink my 
cold beers and get a better view from the TV — with 
instant replay, split screen and authoritative 
commentators supplying every possible angle to evciy 
piav whether I want them to or not. 

But my job is to cover the game, and it would be 
unethical to write the story without actually attending, or 
at least that's what my editor said. He also said that if I 
did stay home and watch the game on TV he would break 
my legs. 

But I am tempted. When I think about the hassle of 
struggling across campus on Saturday morning, probably 
fighting a hangover while tangling with all the 



thousands of other bodies filling CampheU Stuthnn at 

the unholy hour of 12 noon. 

At 12 noon on Saturday I'm usually in search of a hot 
breakfast and hotter coffee in an attempt to get the oV 
blood flowing again. The thought of having brealdast in 
the Campbell Stadium press box is enough to depress 
anyone with even the slightest interest in their own well 
being. I can't really say the food is bad, but that's 
because I never have tasted the stuff, since I vowed 
never to eat anything that d*)esn t look at least as 
appetizing as a fifteen year old garbage can. 

Which is all the more reason for me to stay home 
Saturday. Then I could enjoy my breakfast, get home just 
in time for kick-off, and sit right through FSU-Navy and 
on into FAMU-Southem, maybe even write stories om 
both games. 

Please, consider my plight. I'd love to go to the game if 
I could drink myself into a raging stupor like most of my 
fellow students. But people in the press box sort of look 
down on that kind of activity, although I've yet to figure 
out why. Personally. I never feel comfortable watching a 
football game without some sort of alcoholic elixer to 



li li 8i W ^ji^Ti 0 

HHHHH8HHHH 

smooth out the rough edges — and to fill ia the doU 
spots. 

Of course, if I were really low down I a>uld write my 
slorv after watching the game on TV. and nt>b<Hl\ vM>uid 
know an> different. As a matter of fact, the story might 
even he better, complete with all the sea>nd guesses and 
extra l(H)ks provided by technt>logy. When you consider 
it. the naked eye is really no match for the cameras — we 
only have two eyes while ABC will have at least four or 
five cameras at the game. 

But to ftH)l the public like that would be c^^mpletely 
irresponsible and immature, and I really don't think 1 
could bring mvself to do something that devious. But this 
wouldn't be the first time I ended up doing certain acts 1 
thought myself incapable of doing. So who knows? 

See you Saturday . . . maybe! 



Swimmers open tough schedule 
with Daytona Beach and Auburn 



by gerald ensley 

flambeau sports wriltr 

This afternoon at 1 p.m. m the Unkm 
pool, the FSU men's swimming team opens 
its season against Daytona Beadi CC, 
embarking upon a schedule that is 
considerably tougher than any in recent 
years. The first evidence of that will be 
Friday, when Auburn, ranked second in 
the nation last year, comes to Tallahassee 
for a 2 p.m. dual meet. 

FSU head coach John Stafford, in his 
second season at the Seminole helm, views 
this weekend, and the season, as a whole, 
as a positive training ground for his 
freshman dominated team. 

* 'Eleven of our twenty -four swimmers 
are freshman," noted Stafford. ** We're 
looking at Auburn as a learning 
experience, a chance for our team to come 
of age.** 

Last year the FSU tankers had a good 
season, 9-2 in dual meets, 21st at the 
NCAA championships, and they captured 
the Metro Conference title. But the 
schedule was, in Stafford's opinion, only 
moderately difficuh. This year, in addition 
to Auburn and traditional rival Florida (6th 
in the nation last year), the Seminoles will 
face powerhouses like Tennessee (1st in 
the nation last year), South Carolina, N.C. 
State, Ohio State, and East Carolina. 

Stafford, in assessing this year's goals, 
is remarkably frank. "We're taking things 
one step at a time. This team does not have 
the potential to crack the top ten 
(nationally). The team members are pretty 
realistic about themselves. What wc'fC 
going to concentrate on is swimming 
intelligently. We've worked very hard on 
our starts and turns, and basically want to 
go out to every meet loose, and ready just 
to let 'er rip." 




John Stafford 

. . . FSU men's swimming coach 

Which is not to say that FSU is without 
considerable talent. Steve ABbrttloB, who 
copped a 6th place in tlie SO yard free-style 
at the NCAA's last year, is a retunung 
AU-Anierican (FSU's first since '71). The 
Semim^ co-captau^ Kevin Gonad and 
Brad Stetson, are both school record 
holders. Connelt In the 200 yard 
breaststfoke and Stetson m the 16S0 
fireestyle. 

Stafford also recruited several pfomtnent 
prep stars. Randy Chambers, from North 
Canton, Ohio, is another in a series of 
talented FSU divers (former FSU 
AH'American diver Phil Boggs was, 
coinddentaHy, also fitom Ohio as is 
Stafford). Fkeshman David Rea, tlie team's 
only butterfly swhnmer, will be an able 
replacement for the departed Larry Brown, 

«id Brett liidqQist is a talei^ freestyler. 

hk addlti k^ to die meets today and 
Friday, Sti^fofd, a former FSU freestyler 
and captahi of the '69 team, announced 
that the team wiR have a Garnet and Gold 
mtrasqnad meet Satim^ wamimg at 9 
a.ffl. 




The FSU SOCCER CLUB wM practice 
TODAY et 4 pm on the IM fields 
FSU piays Vaidoeta St on Sun. 



The newly organized FSU Flying Club 
will meet today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 118 
Bellamy. For more information contact: 

Bob Rivera at 644-6167. 

Sports In Brief 

4t ♦ « 

The Budweiser College Super Sports 
were held this past weekend. The winning 
team was the **Budweisers" comprised of 

Dan Cashman (captain). Rov • ■ 



Warren Bell, Karen Turner, Barbara 
Pustizz, Renate Brady, ClariL Raamnssen 
and April Roberts. The team won by 
grabbing first place in the 880 relay, 
tug-of-war, and obstacle course, plus a 
third place in team frisbee, and a fifth 
place in the rounds-Bud, totalling 50.5 
points. 

The **Budweisers" now advance to the 
state finals where they wW compete 
against teams from other state 



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PI ' mm 
Joorida 



Fkiday 

November 17, 1978 




Flambeau 
alumni in 



Serving TaMahamm far M yean 



FSU policeman indicted 
for first degree murder 



by danni vogt 

A first degree nmrder liuMctmeiit was 
brought against FSU police officer Troy 
Springer by the Leon County grand jory 

yesterday. 

Springer, 42, who shot and killed postal 




Sgt. Troy Springer 



worker Willie Saulsberry Oct. 25, 
surrendered himself to the Leon County 
ShertfTs Department and was arrested at 3 
p.m. yesterday. He is being held in solituy 
confinement at the Leon County Jail. No 
bond has been set. 

The grand jury's ruling does not mean 
Springer is guilty of murder, only that there 
is enough evidence for a first degree 
murder charge to be filed. 

Sgt. Springer, a nine year veteran of the 
FSU police force, has been suspended 
indefinitely from his duties pending the 
outcome of his trial, according to FSU police 
spokesperson Jim Sewell. 

**He is not terminated, just suspended 
indefinitely without pay," Sewell said, 
adding the FSU police department has no 
plans to hire another officer to take 
Springer's place. 

"We really can't talk about evidence that 
may influence the trial,*' said Sheriffs 
Department spokesperson Wayne Smith 
when asked for specific details that led to 
the indictment. 

A first degree murder charge infers 
premeditation and is a capital offense 



punishable by death under Florida law. 

**The grand jury spent in excess of 14 
hours in hearing evid^ice and deliberations 
before returning the indictment,*' said 
Assistant State Attorney Warren Goodwin, 
adding '*It was a very complex and difficult 
case." 

Springer and his attorney Andiooy 
Bajoczky made no af^lscatlon for bond 
yesterday, but Bajoczky is expected to ask 
for bond in the first court appearance at 9 
this morning. 

Springer will be arraigned at 8:30 a.m. 
Monday, and Goodwin said he expects tl^ 
trial on the murder charge to begin in late 
February or early March. 

Saulsberry, who had no previous criminal 
record, was killed at 11:45 a.m. Oct. 25 in 
Frisch's parking lot after Springer 
reportedly stopped him for a routine traffic 
violation. 

Witnesses said Springer and Saulsberry, 
who knew each other before tilie incident, 
spoke for no more than a minute before 



turn to tUDiCTMi^, 



11 



ecoming 
edition today 

Homecoming weekend. 

The old folks, the not v<> old and the 
recent grads make their triumphant returns 
to Florida State University over the next few 
days to dig on a little fot>tball. toss down a 
few beers from the \satering holes of 
yesteryear, and see where iheir begumtngs 
have gone. 

The Flambeau, in (fttVrencc to the 
occasion, this year has prepared a small 
homecoming of our own. We invited a few 
Flambeau alumni to rcjom us for this one 
issue and share their talents and a tew of 
their observations with our readers. 

Doug Marlette. now a noted syndicated 
cartoonist, once did graphics and cartoons 
for The Flambeau. He took time out from 
doing PR on his newly-published second 
book to illustrate our At Week's End section 
(which, incidentally, contains several 
interesting Homecoming features as well as 
a list of weekend activities.) 

St. Petersburg Times national correspon- 
dent Martin Dyckman. who once ran The 
Flambeau news desk, wrote a commentary 
for our editorial page, and former Flambeau 
advisor Bob Sanchez, now a member of the 
editorial board of The Miami Herald, delved 
into the possible effects of the shift in 
legislative power to south Florida on FSU 
and the University of Florida. 

Other articles by other Flambeau alumni 
can be found in the paper under a 
"Revival" logo on pages 23 through 26. 
with one tucked away somewhere in sports. 

So enjoy your weekend (we trust Navy 
won't mind too much being shelled in 
Campbell Stadium), and for all the alumni, 
to hell with Thomas Wolfe. 

Welcome home. 



Arrested students 
hear charges as 
80 picket court 



by beth rudowske 



About 80 persons picketed in front of' tile Leon County 
Courthouse yesterday morning as the eight feM iians 
arrested during a Wednesday rally at FSU made tiiehr first 
appearance in court. 

A Colombian woman also arrested Wednesday ^i4ien 
students clashed with police was bailed out for $2,100 that 
same evening when local feminists raised money to pay 
her bond. 

Charges against the nine include disorderly condoct, > 
resisting arrest with violence, battery on a police officer 1 
and assisting in an escape. • "o^ 

All of the men, being held in the Le<Mi County Jail, arc ^ 
charged with at least one felony, and tlieir b<mds range 
from $2,100 to $4,500. 

turn lo IRANIANS, pmgm 13 




Bound ^ 

. . . Iranian students leave courthouse in chains after 

hearing yesterday morning 



FSU police to see 
if officer started fire 

ffom staff raports 

FSU's Department of Public Safety is <^eckiflt into 
reports that one of • its offiMS wmy have ignited aa 
oil-soaked effigy of the shah of Iraa during a raBy 
Wednesday. 

*'We are seriottsly looking into tlw nuBor tliat a 
plain-dothesflMn started tiie fite," spokesperaoo Sgt Jin 
Sew^ said yesterday. 

Some onlookers at the tunraltaoHs Uito Contyaid raSy 
have maintained an officer wearing a brown suit set fire to 
the effigy, although others say it was set by an 
unidentified Iranian demonstrator. 

Sewell said die investigation stems from reports from 
civilian wtoesses and not the officers who wm neartlw 
effigy when it was burned. 

No plaindothes officers involved in scuffles with 
demonstrators have been disciplined, Sewell said. 

In the aftermath of Wednesday's rally* which resuhed in 
the arrest of nine Iranian demonstrators. Vice President 
for Student Affairs Dr. Bob Leadi said he will personally 
review permits for cMapm gatherings for the aeit ieveial 
days. 

**I consider safety of students a primary responsibility." 
Leach said yesterday. **This indndan the safety at the 
students who want to demonstrate, as well as other 
students, police officers, and oihers." 



ft 



I 
1 



I 



III 



•I* 



■1 



Florida 



Friday 

November 17, 1978 




Flambeau 



Senrlng TaHfthMee f ot ee ymn 



FSU policeman indict 
for first degree murder 




liy itenni vogt 

Mstetanf iMwt MMw 

A first degree murder indictment was 

brought against FSU police officer Troy 
Springer by the Leon County grand jury 
yesterday. 

Springer, 42, who shot and killed postal 




Sgt. Troy Springer 



worker Willie Saulsberry Oct. 25, 
surrendered himself to the Leon County 
Sheriffs Department and was arrested at 3 
p.m. yesterday. He is being held in solitary 
conftnement at tiie Leon County Jail. No 
bond has been set. 

The grand jury's ruling does not mean 
Springer is guilty of murder, only that there 
is enough evidence for a first degree 
murder charge to be filed. 

Sgt. Springer, a nine year veteran of the 
FSU police force, has been suspended 
indefinitely from his duties pending the 
outcome of his trial, according to FSU police 
spokesperson Jim Sewell. 

'*He is not terminated, just suspended 
indefinitely without pay,** Sewell said, 
adding the FSU police department has no 
plans to hire another officer to take 
Springer's place. 

**We really can't talk about evidence that 
may influence the trial,** said Sheriff's 
Department spokesperson Wayne Smith 
when asked for specific detaib that led to 

the indictment. 

A first degree murder charge infers 
premeditation and is a capital offense 



punishable by death under Florida law. 

**The grand jury spent in eicess of 14 
hours in hearing evidoice and delS^eratioiis 
before returning the incfictment," said 
Assistant ^ate Attorney Warren Goodwin, 
adding *it was a very complex and difficult 
case.** 

Springer and his attorney Anthony 
Bajoczky made no application for bond 
yesterday, but Bajoczl^ is expected to ask 
for bmid in the first court a{^>earance at 9 
this morning. 

Springer will be arraigned at 8:30 a.m. 
Monday, and Goodwin said he expects tiie 
trial on the murder charge to begin in late 
February or early March. 

Saulsberry, who had no previous criminal 
record, was killed at 11:45 a.m. Oct. 25 in 
Frisch's parking lot after Springer 
reportedly stopped him for a routine traffic 
violation. 

Witnesses said Springer and Saulsberry, 
who knew each other before the incident, 
spoke for no more than a rainiite before 



turn to IHDICTMSNT, 



11 



alumni in 
Homecoming 

edition today 

Homecoming weekend. 

The old folks, the not -so-old and the 
lecent grads make their triumphant returns 
to Florida State University over thr uvw few 
days to dig on a little football. tKss down a 
few beers from the watering holes of 
yesteryear, and see where their begwmngs 
have gone. 

The Flambeau, in deference to the 
occasion, this year has prepared a small 
homecoming of our own. We invited a few 
Flambeau alumni to rejoin us for this one 
issue and share their talents and a few of 
their observations with our readers. 

Doug Marlette, now a noted syndicated 
cartoonist, once did graphics and cartoons 
for The Flambeau. He i(H)k time out from 
doing PR on his newly-published second 
book to illustrate our At Week's End section 
(which, incidentally, contains several 
interesting Homecoming features as well as 
a list of weekend activities.) 

St. Petersburg Times national correspt)n- 
dent Martin Dvckman, who once ran The 
Flambeau news desk, wrote a commentary 
for our editorial page, and former Flambeau 
advisor Bob Sanchez, now a member of the 
editorial board of The Miami Herald, delved 
into the possible effects of the shift in 
legislative power to south Florida on FSU 
and the University of Florida. 

Other articles by other Flambeau alumni 
can be found in the paper under a 
* 'Revival" logo on pages 23 through 26. 
with one tucked away somewhere in sports. 

So enjoy your weekend (we trust Navy 
won't mind too much being shelled in 
Campbell Stadium), and for all the alumni, 
to hell with Thomas Wolfe. 

Welcome home. 



Arrested students 
hear charges as 
80 picket court 



by belli fudowske 



About 80 persons picketed in fhmt of the Lcoft Cosnty 
Courthouse yesterday morning as the eight Ina^s 
arrested during a Wednesday rally at FSU made their first 
appearance in court. 

A Colombian woman also arrested Wcdi»sday when 
students clashed with police was bailed out for $2400 that ^ 
same evening when local femhusts raised money to pay ^ 
her bond. 

Charges against the nine inchide disorderly OMidoct, 
resisting arrest with violence, battery on a police officer 
and assisting in an escape. 

All of the men. being held in tfie Leon County JaU, are 
charged with at least mic folony. and thdr bonds rtfige 
from $2,100 to $4,500. 

turn to IRAMAHS, pmge 13 



3 
"O 

c 
8 

t 

£ 

O 

I 




Bound 

. . . Iranian students have courthouse in chains after 

hearing yesterday morning 



FSU police to see 
if officer started fire 

frofii gtsff reports 

FSU's Department of Public Safety is checkhig buo 
reports that <me of-Hs offioen mtef have ipted tm 
oil-soaked effigy of the shah of Iran dnteg a rafly 
Wednesday. 

"We are serious^ looking into the nuM that a 
plam-doCheMBaa started the fife," spokesperson Sgt Jim 
Sewell said yesterday. 

Some oBlookers at file tumattaoos Uakw Owftyard rally 
have maintained an officer wearing a brown suit set fire to 
the effigy, although ofiiers say it was set by «i 
unidentified Iranian demonstrator. 

Sewell said the investigation stems from feports tiom 
civilian witnesses and not the officers who ware soar the 
effigy when it was burned. 

No i^ainclothes officers involved in scuffles with 
demonstrators have been disciplined. Sewell said. 

In the aftermath of Wednesday's rally, which resulted in 
the arrest of nine Iranian demonstrators. Vice President 
for Student Affairs Dr. Bob Leach said he will personally 
review perm^ for campus gatherings for the nest several 
days. 

**! consider safety of students a primary responsibility.** 
Leach said yesterday. "This includes the safety of the 
students who want to demonstrate, as weU as otiier 
students, potice officers, and others." 



i 

Mi 




A penitvr H 
the door on 
saving he o^c 
private law pra 
Ipubltc offu t 

At an and 
b. fore the Cap 
hr returns to t 
p< rsoiial integ 
tbility intact 
kni>wledtt of a 

Shcvln w«» 
ttic DOBOcratic 
it was widely 
a federml 
characteristkra 
aggressWe and 
runofr campai 
general said t 

Offers from 
sii-figwe brae 
14 yean as an 

said he is oblig 
much moncv a 
In his eight 
highest legai 
worth decreas 
$9,000 annuall 
In reflectir 
service as att 
and represen 
proudest of: 
•His role 
murderers Frr 
Gov. Reubtn 

11 



1 L.: 



A FLAMBEAU Fnctey, Novwnber 17, 1978 / 3 




Shevin leaves state office, 
will enter private law firm 



by itonnis mu iqu — w 



tis 



\ pensive Robert Shevin officially closed 
)r on his politienl auccr yesterday, 
11 g he owed it to hit iunily to enter 
vate law practice n^er Hum seek other 
blic office. 

At an anti-climactic final appearance 
fore the Capitol press corps, Shevin said 
returns to the private sector with his 
rsonal integrity, intelligence and legal 
ility intact and a "serene personal 
owledge of a job well done.** 
Shevin was trounced by Bob Graham in 
c Democratic primary. 
It was widely rumored that Shevin would 
k a federal judgeship. Appearing un- 
ci racteristically sedate in contrast to the 
.^^ressive and ebullient Bob Shevin of the 
noff campaign, the departing attorney 
tneral said the decision was primarily 
onomic. 

Offers from private law firms were in the 
iv figure bracket, Shevin said, and after 
1 tars as an underpaid public servant, he 
id he is obligated to his family to earn as 
uch money as he can. 
In his eight-year tenure as the state's 
ighest legal officer, Shevin said his net 
orth decreased an average of $7,000 to 
).000 annually. 

In reflecting on his 14 years of public 
ervice as attorney general, state senator 
nd representative, Shevin said he is 

roudest of: 

•His role in the pardon of convicted 
urderers Freddie Pitts and Wilbur Lee by 
ov. Reubin Askew. 

•Successfully defending Florida's death 




Robot ^bevin 

penalty, which the Supreme Court at one 
point invalidated. 

•Filing anti-trust suits resulting in the 
return of $4.5 million to consumers. 

•Halting construction of the Cross- 
Florida Barge Canal. 

•Preventing the dumping of hazardous 
chemicals by Dupont into the Gulf of 
Mexico. 

As a private citizen, Shevin said he will 
lobby gratuitously for a cap on campaign 
spending. He said he would have defeated 
Graham if there had been a spending limit. 

turn to SHEVIN, page 13 



todo/sycxDO fashion placel 





over 



JUST 



Between 



300 SKIRTS from $13 in wool-veloar- 

cotton blends-nylon 

WOOL SLACKS W/PLEATS 

(Lined) *y Savanah $25 reg. $45 
TOPS ^ styles from $8 to $12* 

values to $28 

SWEATERS $12" mens/womens 

Values to $28 

LEOTARDS AND WRAP SKIRTS 
FLA NNEL SHIRTS 2 for $ 25 

JEANS FOR 

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die secmd pair of eqml Ydbne is $1'~ 
$23 is the most you pay for 2 pair! 

Slil»lH|>6«M«r S76-21si M-S*t IfrW Sun l-« 





TALLAHASSEE MALL 
PARKWAY SHOPPING CENTER 



HLtA 



Students, alumni, fans, et. al; 

Look to homecoming, late fall; 
Seminoles with the brightest smiles; 
the fashionable ones, Lerner Styles; 



Mary's fashions for weekend whirl 

Chenille dress $22.99 

Garnette Blouse $10.99 
felt hat $939 



N 



r • 'B • * «--• .« • • • • • • • 




ISA 



On Wed 
people (etft 
am Latbi 
arrested at 
called by 
Ataodatiofi 

sliah's 
U.S. domtfi 
same time 
place CIA 

campys trv 
join ffiem i 
peoples' r 

v.. rid or. 
iriNiall fasci 
While t^ 
peaceful de 

a \ \ \ : I * u s 

CDiintv p*^ 
when tht 
down dumt 



Fl ORIDA f[ AMRCAU Fndav November fT 5 



)( Wing of the 
3uu , ifinSoulhern Aif^ 

224-7 1 IB 



Varsity I 



HALLOWEEN 




^4 



Varsity 2 



ISA member condemns attacks on Iranian students 




Lditor: 

On Wednesday, Nov. 15. nine 
people (eight Iranian students and 
one Latin American woman) were 
arrested at FSU during a noon rally 
tailed by the Iranian Students 
Association (ISA) to oppose the 
shah s militarv t,'overnment and 
U.S. domination in Iran. At the 
same time the rally was taking 
place CIA recruiters were on 
ampus trying to lure students to 
.)in them in their efforts to subvert 
:)eoples' movements around the 
world or, as in the case of kmn, to 
nstall fascist dictators. 

While the rally started as a 
:)eaceful demonstration, it ended in 
a vicious assault on Iranian 
students by the FSU and Leon 
County police. The attack started 
when the campus cops knocked 
down dummies of the shah and CIA 



that were to be burned in effigy. 
When students, both Iranian and 
American, rose to defend the effigy 
the police began beating the 
students while trying to apprehend 
them. At this time witnesses saw 
one of the plainclothed poficenen 
ignite the effigy. This was an 
attempt to make it look as though 
the students had provoked the 
attack by police. This inctdent 
precipitated the arrest of several 
ISA members who were defending 
themseWes against police brutality. 
Others were mealed for mere 
leafleting. 

In response to the arrests the 
students began chanting ''police 
off campus,** and **U.S. advisors, 
CIA agents out of Iran.*' The 
demonstrators then tightened their 
ranks in determination to res»t iht 
intimidation of the police — many 



equipped with riot gear. Later a fire 
truck was hroaglit ta as further 
ip tim ida t ioa. The deouuids: 
those arrested.*' *XIA off 
campus/' and "police offcaaqms" 
quicidy rang through the air. 

The attack on the Iraaiaa 
students witaessed yealefdi^ is 
part of a systematic caa^Kaign 
being waged agakist KA tapvevent 
them from informing Amerkaas 
and people around the world item 
the events in Iran. 

In many cities monA the U.S. 
such as Chicago, L.A., Houston, 
and San Francisco, ISA has been 
brotaMy attacked aad arreted 
while demonstrating against the 
shah and the U.S. government. 
This signifies the close collabora- 
tion between the CIA, U.S. police, 
FBI and SAVAK (the secret police 
of Iran). Because the mass 



moveuMmt ia Iran haa growa to 
sach p roport ioB ia recent moalltt. 
the shah and Ms U.S. bacfecrs iMve 
fomMi it accessary to step up their 
attacis on iraaiaa stadeais 
kaowiag that the support of the 
Amertcaa people can have a greirt 
unpact ia weaheaiag the abffity of 
the U.S. government to contiaae to 
support the shah, a fascist ifictMr. 
We are asking all jastioe-^eefcing 
Aawricaas to jom us ia raisiag the 
demands: 

1. Drop the charges agaimt the 
nine students arrested. 

2. Apprehension of the police- 
man who provoked the attach. 

3. Stop police, FBI and CIA 
harassment of the ISA. 



CATCH IT AT . . . 



NOtniWOOOMAU 



FSU 
SEMINOLE 
CENTER 

. . . support Mm Semmoiet lo style thij ymm 
wMli garnet & gold clothirtg and 
«e<«S4ones from Mr A s Universrty Shop. 

Shirti, Jacket}. Sweateri, Hoti, Tie*, 
UmbreMot and moch more ... oil certain 
to give you Salwrday Night Feverf !! 

Special 20% OFF on all 
FSU. garnet nykxi iadceCi. 





A UNIVERSAi PICTURE 
lECHNICOLOR* 



Miracle X 




JAMES JANE JASON 
UAN FONDA ROBARDS 



» * S r » * f » * 





,.1 



fV I 



WW 




1" 
I 



mm I * 



m 




i: 



Flambeau is not objective 



Editor: 

That is what I like about your staff 
writer: objectivity. They take their 
reporting seriously. And if you believe that 
1 have some swampland to sell you. 

I must admit, coloring the account of the 
Iranian ruckus into a soap opera does grab 
and hold the attention of the reader. That's 
what all novelists strive to achieve. 

It was downright police brutality for the 
officer to try to force down and hold the guy 
that cat him in the face. Brutality, plain 
and siiiipte. It's downright anconstitutkmal 



not to allow non-citizens their right to riot. 

But it was your editorial that was really 
heartwarming. You titled it ' The caring." 

They really care about us Americans, 
don't they? they are really on our side. 
That's why among their repertoire of 
cliches are such chants as "Down with 
Carter," "Americans out of Iran" and 
'*Down with the CIA's puppet regime" ad 
nauseum. 

Once you boil it all down, it comes up 
you can't spit in someone's face and expect 
him to like you. 



FPIRG battle should cease 



.£dit4Nr: 

The issue of establishing a Florida PubUc 
Inteiest Research Group here at FSU has 
become a battle between the written words 
within The Flambeau editorials and the 
studmt government. It seems that we must 
stop tiie tuurage of insults and '*who voted 
whidi way and why'* and start educating 
the stadeot hody in a more constructive 
way. I have talked with many students 
alKNlt FPIRG and have made them more 
aware of what exactly is g<m^ on with the 
PIRG issue. It is more than evident that 
one persiMi cannot do tiiis akme, as 
evidenced by the number of students that 
must be reached in order to complete the 
petition whidi will help to establish a PIRG 
here at FSU. I have become aware tiiat 
there are many uninformed and 
mismformed students; some are not even 
sure iHiat PIRG would actually do for them 
(whidi would, stated simply, be a lot). 

We most aesk ourselves if we can 
continue the push for PIRG before tbe fact 
ttmt tiiere are stiU students ''wandering 
aioond in the wlldemess/' espedaDy in 
^ area oftlie landing meftods for PIRG. I 
have heard that thm are many would-be 
u *- • M Titi.li -1 1 i i . -i . I . , ;, , — 't . 'iTi , 



student advocates who think they have to 
pay $2 just to sign the petition. It is 
examples such as this that concern me and 
why I also voted against the resolution 
(which does not mean Vm against having a 
PIRG here at FSU). 

Education of the student body would 
provide the feedback the Student 
Consumer Union, the FPIRG committee, 
and student government need, provided 
the student body is willing to be educated. 
In this, there should be no question. How 
students can sit baick and nc^ even inquire 
to people who are readily available to put 
PIRG and you, the student, in the right 
perspective through infrnmation, to me, is 
the issue that defies all reascm.** It must 
be said that there have been attempts to 
reach the student by a letter sent to The 
Flambeau by FPIRG director Tom Qumn, 
detailing the funding process of FPIRG. 
Even tiiough much more has to be done by 
both sides, to ttte date of my letter, I have 
yet to see Tom*s letter printed in The 
Flambeau. 

Pat Cwmlngham 
FSU stndeat senator 
(Editor's note: Tom Qafam's letter Ims 
prinled fai The Fbunbean.) 



AMERKAN ^ 

CANCER SOCKTY T 

Tins spKC coninbultd by the publ'iiier 




Rm. 314 Unhfersi^ Union 

644-6744 

9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 




Philippe Junot, 
Married to Royalty: 
' i got my position as 
husband of Princess 
Carottse with a Mediatype 





J/MMY CROZIER 
IS ALIVE AND 
WELL AT 

FRI. it SAT. 



Good thru 





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8-TRACKS $4»» 

LP's List $7^ ONLY $4*» 

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10-9 Men. - Sat. 



12-6 Sundays 



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Large 2 Bedroom 

Townhouses furnishe( 
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Pool, Laundry, 

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576-6814 



BAKER AUTO 
PARTS 



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2M-7161 



Why Me? 



Almost all black /Mnencans have, at 
one time or another in their lives, come 
face-to-face with this fact that they 
are more prone to high blood pressure 
than white Americans While this is being 
singled out m a way unlike *'^<=' "^a-^v 
obstacles experienced m 
the long struggle for 
equality it 'S -^n*;' rhat 
blacK Americans can d"" 
sorr-et^ 'ig about quicKiy 
and easi!/ 

We don t know what 
causes high biood 
pressure, and we don't 
know why black 
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white Americans 

On the average, a 
Mack /Unerican wiii die 




Giv« to aw Amwican HmiI AMOdawn 

WTRE FfGHIING FOR YOUR UFE 



sooner than a white American who devel- 
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You can t tell on your 
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in most cases, there are 
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Rm. 314 University Unk)n 
644-5744 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

Let us design.. 



Resumes 

invitatbns 
Posters 

Business Cards 

Fliers 

Booklets 



Menus 

Brochures 

Pamphlets 

Newsletters 

Books 
Bulletins 





mediatype 



Rm. 314 University Union 

camera ready art 



644-57 



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Pioneer KP 4000 am/fm 
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a Pioneer KP 8006 mmtfrn 
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Offering true discount prices day m and 
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discount prices are wtiat we're all 
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WE SELL STEREO 

NOT ATMOSPHERE! 

We don t fool yoo with pretty store 
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so you don1 pay extra for frills. 



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222-5020 



CUmi2)M Hlfl 



I 



11 



.."111! 




ood 
/on 



rida food 

' "istmas prt* 
t m mcti S 
Health ind R' 
gbat the depart n 
purcliase the 
IThis action re I 
the food st«i 
*For insui 
in the 
only 
lionwide chanj 

the Christi 
Another 

food 
m^e some 
benefits. he| 
On tile other 
(High money 
be Mt to 
These new 
ways. The food 
e not 
ftaa^, 
be tax ex< 

ate nnemplo 
According 
mtaiftnitor 

'ettn^Mtion « 
an boon t^ 
to iff^ 




MON - S 
TUES - m 
WED ~ SH 

TMURS- 
FRI - SHI 
SAT SH 



Westwoc 
Plaza 



We'll ^- 
after ih< 



aiMiii iiii iiiitflmiiiiitrtiiiinii 



618 W ■ 





bod stamp users 
on't have to pay 




wSl be fetting an early 



lot 



S. WOmH, m a tUuty of tte De|Mrtneat of 
alth aad Bdiahllitstive Seiviccs, leveakd yestetday 
t the department will not require iiM food stamp cfieots 
purchase the 00190111 after Dec 1. 
his actioB feleaaea t e cip ft eats from paying for a portioii 
he food ftaaqw ii ofder to receive the free stamps. 
For histaiice/' loberts ezpbined, "where a person 
d S60ta the pastfor SMworfllof Ibod stamps, they'll 
ceive only $40 worth of stamps aad pay nothing." This 
tionwide change in policy is ilaied to begin Jan. 1, but 
rida is nuiklng the change a month earlier, just in time 
r the Christmas season. 

Anotlier change in the program will reduce the amount 
food stamps in circnktion by approiimately $3 billion 
d make some fmffies with higher hicomes eligible for 
e benefits, he added. 

On the other hand, many poorer families who never had 
ough money to buy stamps under the old system wiD 
w be able to get them for free, Roberts said. 
These new regulations will affect college students in two 

ays. The fcx)d stamp policy presently allows students who 
e not declared as exemptions by their parents to collect 
xl stamps, but under the new law "students who are or 
uld be tax exemptions, and who are not exempt due to 
edical or marital reasons, must register for work with the 
tate unemployment offices.*' 

According to David Hinnant, Florida program 
dministrator for Health and Rehabilitative Services, the 
'elimination of the purchase procedure will save a lot of 
an hours that can be utilized in other areas of the 
rogram to improve services and cut down on fraud." 




PACIFIC 
RCSTAURANT 

I9S0 W. Penaacoh St. 
S7S-a222, 5754m3 

Open 11 a.m.-IOp.m. M-F 
Bp.m.f 0 p.m. Sat. 
Closed Sun. 



LUNCHEON 
SPECIALS 



MON - SWEET & SOUR PORK & FRIED RICE 
T UES - MOO GOO GAI PAN & FRIED RICE 
WED - SHRIMP FRIED RICE & CHICKEN 

THURS - PEPPER STEAK & FRIED RICE 
FRI - SHRIMP FRIED RICE & EGG ROLL 
SAT - SHRIMP FRIED RICE & 2 DRUMSTICKS 



Westwood 
Plaza 



PACIFIC 
REST. 




Bridge 



oc 
m 

CO 

o 
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Campbell 
StacUum w 



We'll be open this Saturday at 4 p.m.. Come by 
after the game and enjoy Saturday's special. 



KLECTROLOGIST 



Removed Penmmmify 



physicians 

tt80W.T( 
Lot 212 



FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Friday, WO K OTb ef 17, 1978 / 9 

i ABAC AUTO PARTS • 
• Student Discounts I 
W.Ma<ttsonSt. I 



KU i OS 



LINDA 





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878-13; C78 13; 
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F78-f4,15: 678-14.16; 

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( Heme for the HoKdm CAR SEBVirP > 



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Includes up to 5 quarts 
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a chassis lubrication Any car or light truck 
Please call for an appointment. 



FRONT END 
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Parts extra, if needed CHEVETTES EXTRA 



CHARGE 

rri 




• Visa • Master Charge 
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Prices in this ad at Firestone stores. 
Competitively priced wfwraver you saa tha Firastona sign 



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Car 

(to deal 

I h..- nr%H 

••We am tj 
Other srr 
menibt r ' 
Thm Keli 
felt were : 
staniis 

Kcli .Ic s. 
that there 
l^Hi to "ki.j 

"The mi 
electricity 
••Twentv-fc 
have a half 
will be lioul 

Kell expU 
the presen' 
contaminat( 

••Perhaps] 
them as 
"blowing II 

Kell then 
leaks that hj 
20 or 30 ve 
vears."' Mj 
maintained, 

Yvonne T| 
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pi npiHA c:i AMPFA' f Crirf^v MnvP'^her 17, 1978 / II 




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For Information 
Cali 877-0334 



for January 1979. 

|nal Pre-School Program 
Toddler Groups 
Teachers 




Caravan from 



deal wWi aodear efiergjr)/' Sie eifiakwd ttie 

wfllfo 



(to 
tefi 

the kmgmwuy," 

*'Oitr Mit ictkMi ihoiild be a broadcast aelioo," the 
saggeatod. "We've to demaad fpom evaiy fadk» and TV 
statkMi an ai diQr laMli4a or elae a sk4B to let the people 
know abost andear eacigsr." 

**We ate't feadrfaif tiie peefle aa It b/' said. 

Otber apeahen at tbe Lewis Paifc lafly iadaded a 
member of the Departnent of Eoviroomeittal Regulations, 
Don Ken, who described some of the severe daagets he 
feh were bvflt hito the nuclear power system aa h now 
stands. 

KeU descrfted die ^tnation as a "time Bomb" and said 
that there wm be OMigh tone nudear readton waste by 
1960 to "kill every person on tfiis earth 216,000 tinwa." 

"The mate pio^ of andear power phmts is not 
electrieiiy,^' Kell claimed, '*bat contamination. 
"Twenty-four of the isotopic by-products of nndear fission 
have a half-fife of over one thousand years," he said, "and 
will be doubtlessly around for a long time to come." 

Ken explained tet te fhture l&s would mean "that 
the present (nuclear plant) situ» themselves would be 
contaadaated wastes," after tiiey have served then* terms. 

"Perhaps they'n cement these plants up and then use 
them as moannMBts , . . witii their contaminants 
"btowing in the wind," he added. 

Ken then asked, refeniag to some of the nuclear power 
leaks that have occured, "If we can't contain this stuff for 
20 or 30 years, then what's going to happen in a million 
years." Mai^ of the contaminating substances, Kell 
maintained, would stffl be active thai. 

Yvonne Truei, another meabet of the Caravan who had 
been with the group dnce Homestead, said that "we are 
here because we came to send a message to Florida to 
build a statewide consdousaess about the hazard of 
nuclear energy." 

"We're not just a bunch of young people out of 
college," she added. "There were a lot of people involved 
In liMhistry here, too." 

After the Lewis Plait ra%, the group met at a faU-out 
shelter in tiie basement of the First Baptist Chmdi for a 
covered-dish dkmer. From here they will return to their 
homes locally imd elsewhere in the state. 



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shooting erupted. 

**1 saw Springer jump back from the car and fire three rapid 
shots." eyewitness Kenneth Hudson said the day of the 
shooting. 

**I didn t hear a shot pric- to him jumping baclt and fuing, or 
after." Hudson added then. 

When ambulance technicians pulled Saulsberry's body 
from the car. another witness said, agun fell from his lap onto 
the pavement. 

Springer was taken to a hospital suffering from chest pains 
before being released two days later. 



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12 / Friday November 17 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEA 




BOR will listen to student 
viewpoints on civic center 



by danni vogt 

assistant news aditor 

The Board of Regents yesterday 
committed itself to hearing student input 
on the renegotiation of FSU*s use-days in 
the Tallahassee-Leon County Civic C^t^. 

'* Before the amount of use-days are 
adjusted we will hear student leaders," 
said Forrest Kelley, BOR director of 
programming and planning. "But we 
camiot guarantee we will abide by tbdr 
recommendations." 

Representatives from the BOR, FSU, 
FAMU and the Civic Center Authority plan 
to meet with the aew dirlc center manager, 
when chosen by the authority, to 
renegotiate use-days. 

FSU Student Body Piesident Neal 
Friedman, who wants more use-days for 
FSU, contends his signature is necessary 
before the BOR approves amendments to 
the 1976 four-part agreement for the 
financing of the center, scheduled for 
oompleticm in 1980. 

The amendments eliminate a 2,200-seat 
auditorium and a 1,000-car parking garage, 
and increase the constmctkm coit from $24 
million to $33.2 myiion. 

They have been apptoved by the city, 
county, and state but not by the BOR, 
which is awaiting the renegotiation ci its 
use-days before approving Hb^ amend- 



Friedman feels the amendments are a 
new contract and thus require the 
signature of the SG President under a 
student fee resolution passed by the 1978 
legislature. 

Kelley also revealed the BOR had not 
been notified before the state Department 
of General Services signed the construction 
contract with the A.M. Campbell Co. of 
Tyler, Tex. Sept. 1. 

"I felt we could have had a greater voice 
(before the signing), since we have put up 
almost half the money," Kelley said, 
adding "but that's like crying over ^ilt 
milk now.'* 

Genera] Services official Bill Scaringe, 
however, said the fact his department 
signed the contract without first consulting 
the BOR was a common procedure. 

**We were designated as agents for the 
BOR for this project and we signed the 
contract under that authority. The signing 
was publicized all over the place, and if the 
Board decided they were against it, they 
should have stepped foward," he said. 

Scaringe added his department doe»i't 
usually ask the BOR for approval before 
signing its contracts because General 
Services handles all BOR projects. 

'*If they had asked," Scaringe said, *'we 
would have been glad to talk to them." 



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RUCO'S 

Rear Wing of the 
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224-7 lie 




^ NOV 16-18 

8:|5PM 119 WILLIAMS 



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FOR AAATURE AUDIENCES 




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deposfts 




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th ese only 1.39 ^fdkft mm 

ogorettes 57^ 

BEER TOWN 

M9 W. TemiessM St. 





i 




tiM cliarfes 

prieiiiicrs ia 

About 20 of 



licCllflBiiia's 
Ameffemns rnti 
tie teniaas w< 

AH if Ac eij 
witlite • few 
fSldrd'yc^r FS1 
iliitiider't cii 

The sesskm 



liiiiali tmed 
••I cliooee 
*'{ doe't bl 

ns p o adod, 



Shev 

Id a gubemati 
people, fai ett 
eipcnshre car 
of his own r 1 
inlllioii m bisl 
••An ttBknol 
spending cap 
to Graham's 
prior to the ri 
Shevin. wK 
local televish 

Sionaire ai 
I to and! 
to an oligan 
In rctrosp 
wasted cffor 
lost the ek 
aggressive a 
vicious attaci 
mistake. 



i 



Showt! 
Weekd 
Sat. B 




The protesters carried signs and banners reading "Drop 
the charges of the 9" and "Free all Iranian polttical 
prisoners in Tallahassee." They began tbdr 
three-hour march at "^1^ a.m. yesterday. 

About 20 of the pickets laid down their signs to enter the 
courtroom and listen quietly to Circuit Judge Hal 
McClamma's exchanges with the prisoners. Some 
Americans interceded during the procedara, as many of 
the Iranians were not fluent in English. 

All of the dgbt requested public defenders, to be named 
within a few days. But McClamma had Margaret Lamar, a 
third-year FSU law student brteming with the piMe 
defender's office, join each accused man before the bar. 

The session had its lighter moments. When the jndge 
asked Nasser Jamali whether he required a public defender, 
Jamali turned and pointed to Lamar. 

"1 choose this lady/' Jamali said. 

'i don't blame you. She's a pretty lady/' McClamma 
responded, drawing iangliter from the capacity cmir tioom 
auifience. 



Shevin 



In a gidiemalorial cao^ialgn that originally indnded ten 
people, in eicess of $10 m^bn was spent, by for the most 
eipenshre campaign in histofy. Graham pumped $700,000 
of his own money into tbtt can^aign. Ected spent $2 
million on liis lothig bid. 

"An unknown wouldn't have been abte to do it with a 
pending cap of $250,000," Shevfai said. He was referring 
to Graham's refothrely obscue status as a state sou^ 
prior to the runoff . 

Shevin, who analyzed the general election returns for a 
local tdevision station, said rice after race pitted one 
millionaire a^dnst anothm'. Sudi a trend, he said, "will 
lead to ani^isl type of government — (itXiadg^ even lead 
to an oligardiy." 

hi retfo^iect, tbc Kfianii lawyer sidd it would be "a 
wasted effort and counter-productive" to speculate wlqr be 
lost the dectixm. However, he did contend that his 
sggresdve campaign tactics, which ce nte re d around a 
vicious attack on Gnduun'i t^lsli^ive record, wete not a 
mistake. 





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did not beieve the men would tij lo jump bait 

"1 sense, qails lo tfw ooatraiy, t^ yen are aniions to 
eome leeont and tcB yev slofy. I'm not gofaig to lead yon a 
lecture on l^s is m of speedi. Ten may know more atait 
tiiat than 1 do." 

"This conatqr was formed byabnnch of l e vointi o na ries," 
kieOaamaaaid to an Iranian atone point "I don'tknowif 
you coflsider ywiiailtm levotetionaries. Bat year fiberty 

will be curtafled." 

He then eiphikMd that if baBed o«l» tlwy ooald aot lea¥e 
their comrties of rc i id e acs whhoat perm lssiua before triaL 
When tiie sessioa finished, the ei#rt men returned to irit 

Under Mda law, ieioBy trials awil he idmdriad wlttiB 
180 days. 

Itadent Association spotospetson Ah Bigdeli was 
listic. 

'Last mffiA, nm of onr rally and what happened here 
J spread wSk over ^ U.S./' he said. 'There are going to be 



••1 



sirybe to protest tdieir arrest 

One polioe oflleer was sfightiy fojued hi the Wadaesday 
ndty at FSU. which drew ahoat 500 people. hiriaiBag 70 

M was die firat time the rai ] 
bdp at a deamastniiaa siMa the 
pro t est er s and police charge that the 
fkncas over the hnndng of an elRgy of the shah af 

ine nme arresseo menanei 
Albottkotd. Handd Aahfof and 
students at North Fhirlda GoauMaity Cofli^ ia 
Conty; Maam Asadt a siBdeat at the Uahrenity of Ptorida: 
Boaihah Azadav. a stadcat at Fiaii^ AAM: MiAaaunad 
Kotennr. Carmen TndSlo and Mtfltitta SMMladwnr. FSU 
stiHieM; and Nasser luuSk, a s t ad e at at FSU and FAMU. 
But iraidan-speaking saaMus say at leaat two of dwte 
names mav not be correct. 



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14 / Ffidiy, No««mbar 17, 1978 FLORNM FLAMBEAU 



i 



V 



if 



0m 



* 

i 



si- J"' 



(it 

HI 




Carter: recession possible 



WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Carter yesterday 
said he anticipates his anti-inflation campaign will work, 
but concedes a recession or depressioo is possible if it fails 
totaUy. 

Carter also restated his strong opposition to mandatory 
wage price controls "unless this nation is at a crisis 
•toge." 

Carter was asked about the consequences of unchecked 
inflation because his top aide on the subject. Alfred Kahn, 
said Wednesday the nation could plunge into a "deep, 
deep depression" if wages and prices continue to 
accelerate rapidly. 

Several prominent private economists have predicted a 
mild recession for some time next year, but none ever has 
used the word depression — which conjures up images of 
the massive unemployinent and bread lines of the early 
1930s. 

"I think this is something we do not anticipate — a 
recession or a depression," Carter told reporters at a 
break^t session. 

*'If we have a complete and abject failure in our 
anti-inflation program, then I think a recession or a 
depression is apofsit^li^" lie said, '*bat 1 think we'll be 
niccessful.** 

Meanwhile, Federal Reserve Board chauman G. 
William MiUer told Congress inflation will not slow next 
year a« ti^Mdly as the admirtstratioa has predicted. 

reason, he said, is that cost iacreases already in the 
economic pipdine "will be placing continued pressure on 
tiie pnce stmcture, so that it will be difficult to break the 
momentum oi inflgt fe n /'. 

Miller said it My tike ''fiv^e to seven years to bring 
inflatkMi down to wiwfe It shoold be — below 2 



He ite said he doen't believe present economic 
ciicmnstano^ point to a recession in 1979 or that there win 
be a "^'crodit cmndi" becanse of near record Interest 
rates. 

IffiOer forecast an inflation rate of between 6.75 and 7.S 
percent doring the fiscal year ending S^it. 30, 1979. 
Carta's vohnrtary anti-lnflirtion program has a target of 



holding price gains to between 6 and 6!4 petceat neat 

year. 

** Inflation will not come down by iMgC 
1979." MUler said. "There is no qnkk fis in 

inflation.** 

Miller predicted that c. . ndc gpowth ncit ye ar wffl 
expand by "roughly" 2.5 to 3 percent and nnemploymcnt 
should remain steady in the 5V* to 6% peroeirt range^ 

At his breakfast meeting. Carter said the only way he 
would ask Congress for authority to impose mandatory 
wage price controls would be "if our nation was in such a 
serious state, approaching a national emergency or danger 
to our own security, there might be aroused in the pubhc 
consciousness and in Congress such a commitment to 
controlling inflation that wage and price controls would be 
necessary, as in the case of war." 

Day an rejects plans 
for Mideast time limit 

(UPI) — Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan today rejected 
both Egyptian and American proposals specifying dates 
for autonomy of the West Bank and Gaza Strip following 
conclusion of a peace pact between Cairo and Jerusalem. 

Briefing members of the intra party security and foreign 
affairs committee of the Israeli parliament, Dayan said the 
Egyptians want elections for the autonomy's legislative 
cooncil to begin five montiis after the signing of a peace 
treaty while a recent U.S. formula speaks about a one year 
deacfline. 

**Israd cannot commit itself to any date,'* Dayan said 
aocordmg to a report broadcast on ttie state run radio. 

Dayan*s remarks amounted to rejection of the American 
compromise formula Inoached to Prime Minister 
Menachem Begin by Secretary of State Cyrus Vance 
earlier this week. 

Daym spoke after Isra^ recalled Defense Minister Ezer 
Weizman from Washing^ to take part in a Cabin^ 
meeting Sunday on the draft peace treaty widi Egypt. 




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Coming Soon Ciirol Mer "AT LAST, AT LAST 

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Youtmrnfimimicm fnonstrous nightmmmt m 
bodf at our midnight show, 

night mt tha Capitai DH¥m hi 



12 



your 



Poetic Pendants For Special People 
Remember the poem? "Monday's child is fair of face. Tuesday s 
chMd is full of grace . . ." We have a charming vermeil pendant to match 
each personality expressed in the verse. And if you're uncertain 
about that special di^, we'll find it on our pefpetuai calendar. 

Pendants $20. 

Amu Christmas Gift Selections Now 

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uf UM Mtmncm Express. Master Charge. Visa, Layaway. 



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Dol 






Home 
Coming 

is not 
a Jane 

Fonda 
Movie 



from staff reports 

Neither is it a typical 
weekend regarding activi- 
ties. Since there are so many 
Hoaecoming events and 
Maee there have been a 
great deal of reshuffling in 
the starting times due to 
ABC's decision to broadcast 
the game we do hereby 
present the latest, the most 
up to date, definitive list of 
Homecoming activities: 
Friday, Nov. 17 

9 a.m.. Band Alumni 
registration will be in the 
Music Building Lounge 
Friday from noon to 5 p.m. 
and Saturday from 9 to 9:45 
a.m. There will also be a 
reception for the band 
alumni at 9 p.m. Saturday at 
the Spanish Oaks Clubhouse 
on High Road. 

10 a.m.. Alumni Regi- 
stration -Longmire Alumni 
Building. 

11 a.m.. Honor Class 
(1928) reception-President's 
home. 

Noon. Honor Class Emer- 
itus Club luncheon -Long- 
mire Lounge ($4.50). 

1 p.m.. Initiation of Honor 
Class into Emeritus Oub- 
Longmire Lounge. 

3 p.fn.. HomecofDing par- 
ade-Capitol to Law School. 

3:30 p.m.. Lecture by Dr. 
NciJ Frank, director of the 
National Hurricane Center- 
275 Cbemistrv 



DougMmHMe 



' Mow 9 s^§Miemd €m9oa n iti m m M m from ttm 



ChmloOB Otsorver, Marlette has just published a 

M^cond hook of his cMttnons, 



UMPii to E)ftSMTS^ fiOffO 17 



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1 * 



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16 / FMaf,Ho¥mHbm 17, 1978 AT WSK'S END 



FSV% Savage 
Smm (aliaB Joe 

Kidder) takes 
to the w atrpmA 



Mil 'ill 



Wi 



ptwto by fotwft o Ivy 



a 4.0 and ability 



he sets the 



i»y •vslyn bock 



A few toocfies of wirpaint and a dose of 
Satmday night fever turn Joe Kidder into a 
savage. 

Kidder, aa FSU junior majoring in 
criminology, » the man behind the enigma 
of Savage Sam, the Florida State mascot 
who opens each home football game by 
galloping wildly onto the field of Campbell 
Stadium atop an Apaloosa called 
Renegade, shouting war cries as he thrusts 
a flaming spear into the Seminole logo at 
the 50-yard line. 

Selected last spring from among 180 
applicants on the basis of his 4.0 GPA and 
his ability to ride bareback, Kidder has 
been riding since he was six. 

Savage Sam was at first only a crude idea 
' spawned by Coach Bobby Bowden and 
Seminole booster Bill Durham in an effort 
to foster schctol spirit. Renegade was 
donated by Dr. Jerry Deloney, a local 
veterinarian. 

My first costume," Kidder said, 
laughing, "was Mrs. Chenoweth's 
bathrobe. She's the lady who takes care of 




Renegade. We were over at her place the 
Thursday befor the Oklahoma State have, 
and we still didn't have a costume. She 
came out dressed in this really colorful 
bathrobe, and everybody just looked at 
her. That bathrobe, along with a pair of 
Danskins pantyhose, became my 
costume." 

Now, however, Kidder wears an outfit 
handmade for him by the Seminole 
Indians. In the tradition of the Seminoles, 
Kidder wears a long, multi-colored cotton 
shirt, leather vest, and a sash, along with a 
feathered headdress and his spear, also 
adorned by feathers. 

Practice for his Saturday night 
performances consists of riding Renegade 
three or four days a wedt« always without a 
saddle. 

* 'Sometimes I think Renegade's almost 
human," Kidder said. "Nothing bodiets 
him. Not the cannon or the flaming spear. 
Nothing. I was afraid he wouldn't like 
music, so I got litm used to the noise of the 
band and die crowd by placing a ra^o m 
his stall and taming the vokime aU the way 
up. 

Kidder arrives at eadi game several 
hours early m order to get ready. 

"The make-up is the worst part," he 
said. '* Mr. Durham puts ^ on me. It talces 
about 20 minates toap|]iy. He puts it in my 
ears and down my neck, and ahvajrs paints 
an arrow on my fece. It takes a fittle kmger 

to get if off, and makes my free turn black 

and red." 

A few near accidents have plauged 
Savage Sam, but each time he has escaped 
uiriiarmed. 

"The top of my spear is always doused 
with kerosene before rs m," Kidder said. 
"One tune the kerosene dnpped all the 
way down the spear, and when I was 
hoMmg it, the flame started spreading. 
Twehrefemlfert homed off before aomeooe 
noticed it, hot it didn't touch me. Now we 
wrap foil around the spear to contain tte 



An unpointed Joe Kidder 



* * * «m • « 



tmm to SAM, tmgm l? 



IXTRASIZU 

rOI WOMIN 

TOPS 36-52 
PANTS 3049 
HALF SIZES 12> :-32Vi 
mis 8-22 



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204 S. Adams "On the Commons" Tallahassee 



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% gciini to be nodiing Mri#tf riM a CIKECH * CHONG 
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I a CHOm Im helped make the TO^s go IN SMOMBT 

. th* comedy team diat gave birth to rock c(xnedy 

and miheimwssof limaiBgonawholegenmrfo^ 
PkU iqi amBerous auonds, inckidn^ 

and a Giwifny for tfieir aAiin^ ^416 CodriBoaT 
^k>w rs lime foi a OBCHIk CHOMSmoiile. 
C * Ca -W M WOlcr' wff make yoM fed voy fonv 
So don't 90 slraiiitt to see fMs movie! 



4.^ 



fWamount hcturcs Presents 



AioMAdlerpRMtolon 



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Stanrmg Cheech Marin and Tommy ChoBi 
a«l<k^.ic_a. '^^^^ Edie Adams StroCher Martin 

PfeS^^LuTr Stedenko Written by Tommy Cheng & Cheech Marin 

^P^^dycedbyl^Adfer&LouLombardoD^^ IWisionS 

RiiiEST]roiaj~y^ ^^-^ c I — TTT-i 



CINEMA 2 

TWIN THEATRE 



^SIE^Z. Moodby fftrv fridby %M t 9:50 



I III 




Saml 



At anofh* 

1,(1, T V* .1-. 



1 Ik i - 

a horse on ti 

•But rha'l 
dittc-rr : 
? fo»'fball pt.i 
( I; posiru: 
htf fields 

^ava^t' 
FMi. I't' 
s.tid. A loc- 

Evei 

4 p.m ( 

5:45 p.n 
Union (SS 

8:15 p.r 
Diamond. 

8:30 p 
non-studer 

9 a.m 
Turk IV > 

parking lot; 
with Grad? 
Building I 
Semint)k' i- 
9-11 a.m. 
contincnta' 
— Sandtl' 

10 am 
Breakfast 
(free); Coll| 
Brunch — 
practice a 

Semui'-i' 

12;50 p 
Stadium 

5-6:30 ! 

($4.7S). 

6:30 p ! 
Apalachei 




A I! 




16 / Friday^ Novwnber 17. 1978 AT WEEK'S END 



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FSU'm Savage 
Sam (alias Joe 
Kidder) take* 
to tile warpath 



With a 4.0 and ability 
to ride^ he gets the job 



by ewlyfi teck 

«l«mbMv staff writer 

A few touches of warpaint and a dose of 
Siturday night fever turn Joe Kidder into a 
savage. 

Kidder, an FSU junior majoring in 
criminology, is the man behind the enigma 
of Savage Sam. the Florida State mascot 
who opens each home football game by 
galloping wildly onto the field of Campbell 
Stadium atop an Apaloosa called 
Renegade, shouting war cries as he thrusts 
a flaming spear into the Seminole logo at 
the 50-yard line. 

Selected last spring from among 180 
applicants on the basis of his 4.0 GPA and 
his ability to ride bareback, Kidder has 
been riding since he was six. 

Savage Sam was at first only a crude idea 
' spawned by Coach Bobby Bowden and 
Seminole booster Bill Durham in an effort 
to foster school spirit. Renegade was 
donated by Dr. Jetty Deloney, a local 
veterinarian. 

My first costume," Kidder said, 
laughing, "was Mrs. Chenoweth's 
bathrobe. She's the lady who takes care of 




An unpainted Joe Kidder 



Renegade. We were over at her place the 
Thursday befor the Oklahoma State have, 
and we still didn't have a costume. She 
came out dressed in this really colorful 
bathrobe, and everybody just looked at 
her. That bathrobe, aloi^ wkh a pair of 
Danskins pantyhose, became my 
costume.** 

Now, however, Kidder wears an outfit 
handmade for him by the Seminole 
Indians. In the tradition of the Seminoles, 
Kidder wears a long, muhi-colofed cotton 
shirt, leather vest, and a sash, along with a 
feathered headdress and his spear, also 
adorned by feathers. 

Practice for his Saturday night 
performances consists of riding Renegade 
three or four days a week, always without a 
saddle. 

"Sometimes I think Renegade's almost 
human," Kidder said. "Nothing botiiets 
him. Not the cannon or the flaming spear. 
Nothing. I was afraid he wouldn't like 
music, so I got Jiim used to the noise of the 
band and the crowd by placing a radio in 
his stall and turning the voiume all the way 

UJ). 

Kidder arrives at eadi game several 
hours early in order to get ready. 

**The make-up is the worst ^art,** he 
said. ":Mr.. Duriiam puts it on me. It tal^es 
about 20 minutes to npffty. He puts it in my 
ears and down my neck, and ahvays paints 
an atrow <m nqr fiKe. It takes a litde fonger 
to get if off , and makes my &ce turn black 
and red.** 

A few near accidents have pisaged 
Savage Sam, but each time he has escaped 
unharmed. 

**The top of my spear is always doitaed 
with ketosene before rs IH,** Kklder siud. 
**One time the kerosene drilled all fbt 
way down the spear, and when I was 
hoMiBg ft, the flame started spreading. 
Twdve feadfers burned off beiofe aomeooe 
noticed it, but it didn*t touch me. Now we 
wrap foil around the spear to contam Ae 



k « '« « * 



mn to SAM, gmgm 17 



bts to 




EXTRA SIZES 

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t's going to be nothing straight about a CHEECH & CHONG film 

jSl^f^^^ ^ ^ ^ comedy duo; the 30's had Laurel and Hardy. 
mottftCoslcIo broke up the 40's and Martin and Ixwis really fractured the 50's. 

aBXHtkCHOHGhaMt helped make the 70's go "UP IN SMOKE" 

CHONG are the connedy team that gave birth to rock comedy 

and m die procxts of nmning on a whole generatkx). soM 
piched up numerous^aiMBrdi. im^ 

and a GrMmy for their album, n^w CMii^^ 
Now It s time foi a CIKECH A GHOMG movie. 
C * Cn M SMOMT «« make vou fed veiy fcinny. 
So don't go straigiit to see this movie! 






Upln 

mom 



» 5?**^ Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong 
andStaruk^^K Edie Adams Stiother Martin 

ft^^^ f"!*^ Written by TommyChong &CheechMarin 

'™**^*^l^Adler&LouLombardnrMr«^-wiI.i^.A-«-. i>=.„««i«inn® 



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CINEMA 2 

TWIN THEATRE 



l-onibardo Directed by Lou Adier P^navision® 

] 




sssasasseamam 




I 



At am^th* 
Icf w«si 

Then, 't 

The FSl 
a hof^t' ti 

"Bin thai 
dtffcFcncf Hi 

foniNIl y 

Opp* 
hofnt 

team ■ 

Sa 
FSl 

said, i 

Eve 

4 p m ♦ 
4S p r 

Union (S5 
R IS p. 

8:30 p.ri 
Bon-studenl 

9 a.m. 
•'Turkey 
parking lot| 
with Grad' 
Building 1 
Seniinok- \ 

9.U.. 
pjntmcnia 

10 a m 

Breakfast 

(free); Col 
Brunch — 
practice at 

10 a.m. 
Seminole \i 

12;5() p 
Stadium (<' 

5-6:30 

($4.75). 

6:30 p 1 
Apalachee j 




Ml 

Sp 

La 



All 



i 




AT WEEK'S END Fndav November 17. 1978 / 17 



Sam 



from pm§B It 



At MOlMt' t^Be, MmmgBde resred back too far, and 
Kidder was ainwit tfnowii to the ground. 

Then* of oome, there are the antics of the crowd. 
*'iVople always throw things at me," Kidder said! 
''especially If we're losing. ' ' 

The FSU groaads crew was hesitant at first about letting 
a hotse on the field, fearing that it would tear up the grass. 

"Bot that's oot true/* Kidder said. "You can't tell the 
differenoe between where Renegade has been and where a 
football player has been. It looks the same.** 

Opposing teams, however, will not let the horse on their 
home fields. Kidder, without Renegade, accompanies the 
team to away games when the funds permit it. 

Savage Sam has become something of a celebrity at 
FSU. "People are always asking for feathers," Kidder 
said. A local shop has even produced a T-shirt featuring 

Events from IM90 IB 



4 p.m. Garnet and Gold track meet — FSU track. 
5:45 p.m., Homecoming dinner — Qglesby Student 

Union ($5.75). 

8:15 p.m.. Opera, "The Student Prince" — Ruby 

Diamond. 

8:30 p.m., Pow Wow — Campbell Stadium (S3 
non-students and $2 student, add $.50 at the gate). 

Satorday 

9 a.m., Alumni registration resumes — Longmire; 
"Turkey Trot" 15-kilometer marathon ran — Stadium 
parking lot; homecoming breakfast (sponsored by ODK) 
with Grads Made Good award presentation — Music 
Building Lounge; Varsity — Alumni baseball game — 
Seminole Field. 

9-11 a.m.. School of Library Science Alumni Association 
continental breakfast in Room 09 Library and open house 
— Sandels Building (free). 

10 a.m. College of Education AlniBni Association 
Breakfast — Curricululm Resource Center, Stone Building 
(free); College of Home Economics Alumni Association 
Brunch — Sandels Building Lounge ($2); Band alumni 
practice at Marching Chiefs Field. 

10 a.m.. Class of '53 reception/brunch — Hecht House; 
Seminole varsity basketball scrimmage — Tully Gym. 

12;50 p.m., FSU vs Navy football game — (Campbell 
Stadium (Channel 27). 

5-6:30 p.m.,. Homecoming barbeciM — Tully Gym 
($4.75). 

6:30 p.m.. Band Alumni Banquet — Holiday Inn, 

Apalachee Parkway. 






224E. CoUege 222-5405 

Cheese RavioN 3.S0 

Meat Ravioli 3^ 

Manicotti 3J0 

Spaghetti _ 2.75 

Egg Plant Parmesian 3.50 

Lasagna •••••«••••••■•••• 3.50 

Veal Parmesian 3.50 

All entrees served with tossed salad and bread 



Friday, Saturday and Sunday 
Combination Dinner SPECIAL 
(Ravioli, Manicotti, Lasagna, Egg Plant 

Parmesian, Meat Balls) 
Served with Tossed Salad and Bread 
Served with complimentary glass of wine 

$5.00 



San and Renegade in full dress. 

Betterflies still flutter m Kidder s stomach before each 
gsne, but he's getting used to performing. 

"I was too nervous at first to notice the crowd." he said, 
"but by the second game. 1 felt like Sam really got 
everyone cheering and on their feet and ready for the 
game. 1 think it adds a lot to student spirit. ** 

Kidder is surprisingly inconspicuous out of costume. 
The only sign of his secret identity is the spear, which 
stands poised against a wall near the front window of his 
living room, drawing curious looks from passersby. 

Kidder receives no pay for his e£foits as Savage Sam, 



but feels rewarded m other wass. 

•*It's hard to explain the satisfactii^n 1 get from this.'* he 
said. **!t*s a lot of fun. and l\c met si ' ^plc. I 

think the peak had to be meeting Coa^n Bo^Ucn and 
President Siiger. That's soacthtng i'U aiways 
remember." 

As it appears now. Savage Sam aad Renr^adr wfl oeiy 
be teamed during fcxnball seasons. Kidder said he kopes 
to slip into Sam's warrior dress agam rcft fall 

Is there an> Indian blood courstQg !hT*^gh the vetaa of 
the newest Seminole mascot? 

"Not a drop. " Kidder said. 



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18 / fnd&r. November 17, 1978 AT WEEK'S ENO 



Last vestige 
of women 

coUege dies 

by Howard libin 

llambMw writer 

This is the last Homecoining that will be 
celebrated in the FSU Home Management 
House, as administrators plan to phase out 
one of the last vestiges of the days when 
FSU was called the Florida State College 
for Women. 

The FSU College of Home Economics 
has operated the Home Management 
House program, where students are placed 
in an actual living environment to learn 
how to deal with the problems of operating 
a home, since the turn of the centur>'. 

The Home Management House on 
Copeland Street was torn down last year 
to make room for the new music building, 
the remaining house is located on 
Tennessee, adjacent to the St. Thomas 
Moore Student Center. 

According to university officials the 
decision to terminate the program is due to 
the rising cost of operating the house. 

*'This will be the last group of girls in the 
program," said Dorothy Sigwell, who has 
directed the program for the last 17 years. 
"I feel it will leave a hole in the curriculiim 
that cannot be filled. 

**A11 home-education majors are 
required to reside in the house for 28 days, 
during which time they must perform 
household tasks on which their grade is 
based. 

"The girls learn how to budget, ' ' Sigwell 
said. "The are required to prepare two 
meals a day, seven days a week, for less 
that two dollars a day.*' 

The residents of the house claim living 
there is the most difficult class in their 
curriculum and that if often places financial 




House residents c. 1930 

hardship on those who have to continue 
paying on another dwelling during the 
cMie-month stay. 

"Breakfast has to be ready to serve by 7 
a.m.," said Donna Rhodes, a married 
student who lives in the house. "Not just a 
bowl of cereal, but a nutritious 
breakfast..** 

The women who live in the house resent 
the image people have of them, as 
husband-seeking, home-economics majors. 

"We're not here after a MRS. degree," 
Rhodes insisted. "Why would we come 
to college for four years and work as hard 
as we have just to turn around and marry 
Joe Smuck.** 

According to Sigwell, the Home 
Economics department plans to replace the 
house with laboratories. 

"I don't believe that using laboratories 
will be as effective as the house,** she said. 
"The house makes possibie a total living 
experience." 

The girls acknowledged that the house is 
a unique learning experience and that they 
agree that laboratories will not be able to 
replace them. 

"'It has been hard work while living at 
the house," Scherer said. "But I learned 
more than I ever could have out of a 
classroom situation." 



Memories a half-century old 



by Howard lUiin 



A parade passes by the Westcott 
Boildisg on its way to kidt-off the 

liomeeoming festivkies, as tbooaai^ of 
students and aintai dwcr Aen* itea 
msterFSC. 
FSC? 

The Florida Slate College for Women, as 
FSU was called io 1928, was vitnraiit with 
school spirit aad enthusiasm. 

Everyone awaited the eicttement of the 
h om eco min g bonfire and tfie caH^ms was 



eogaged In a giaat color war. 

Coca-cola sold for a iii^el, a fior winter 
coat cost $18, and the school dairy 
prodoced lOS galkms of milk a day. 

Hie Flambeau was published eadi 
Friday, phooe numbers had only tlvee 
digits and there were no boys on campus. 

**The boys came up on w e ek end ," 
said Louisa OMffadi-Ectemeyer, daughter 
of former FSC President Edward Conradi. 
**We danced m the mority houses and had 
a lovely time." 

Eckermeyer is one of 50 women from the 
graduating class at 1928, who plan to 
attend this year's homecoming at FSU, 



She says tiiat the girls of her class were 
politically conscious, however perhaps not 
as ootq)oken as the students today. 

*'We dealt with tiie problems that faced 
our can^s, like getting appropriatiims 
from the l^islatore," Eckermeyer said. 
*The truth is that the legishiture wasn't 
interested in educating women." 

"We had a lovely campus," Ed»rmeyer 
reminisced. **We were fike sisters, afi 
1,600 of us." 

The campus today is quite different than 
the one fifom whkh tiie dass of 1928 
graduated, and the students themselves 
have changed. 

Eckermeyer commented on what she felt 
about the changing role of women on 
canqms and in the world. 

"It's alright if that's what they want," 
she said. "But their main concern should 
be the home and family." 

"There is n6 satisfaction like raising 
good children,** she added. 

After talking to Louisa Eckermeyer and 
listening to her recollections of events that 
happened a half century ago, we wonder if 
the memories of Homecoming 1978 will be 
as pleasing to recall. 




COI^LAGE 

UnUCTES FOB BOOfilE, MO, 
FOF, MSB fi ALL TUT JJUL < 
L&ST SSEV AT 

TOMMY'S 

SmTOiNidod by huffidrMte of 
•miliiHI md grooving young poople 

HSWARS OFFEAED 

The most enjoyable musical 
evening available in town 

TOKTE! 

AND SVmAY - SPECIAL ATPEARANCE W 

THE BOLUVI! MOTEEHS 

0 TALLAHASSEE'S ALL W«MEN KANB a 




410 W. TENNBSB 

RE-OPENS TODAY 
WISHES F^U. GOOD LUCK 

PUT NAVY BV'^y 

No Tickets? 

Come Watch the Game 

on T ft.T.v. 

MILLER DRAFT 30c 



While the 

ind olhrr 

[associated 
[weekend-long, 
going on that a| 
[returri and 
students. 

Stndlo 
Rahe's NY ( 

"Streamers ■ 
night on the 
starts at 8:1 
students with 
non-students 



musical oper 
tonight tivoui 
Auditorium. 
will start s 



is 

dtiaens get inl 



tooMMTfow an 
Connty Publi< 
of free Dis 
beghmfaig at 
but OMSt be 
library swMch 
to 200. 
Poetry, art 
featured at ih 
the Fine Art 
p.m. Works 
graphers Td; 
diamond, Be 
be included 
readiim ' 
Shows and J 
The eihibtt i 
i/eccmoer o. 
p.m. weekda 
and Sunday. 



» t-s 



Qimrtet conc j 
oflloe in Rooi 
for FSU studj 
Tfcfceto fl 



Ualae Ticket 



avaiabk all{ 
local irighl 



bftegCoBagj 

funk-flBed 



baad, the 
ae-st«ge apj 
And w;th tl 



stajrhig u I 



■ 




Life outside Homecoming 



fUmbcM staff wrHar 

Wktte tlw P«« W«w, Hi 

and other vividly varied hafypenings 
associated with the grand event coottose 
weetoid-kMig, there's still a €ew tlDBSt 
goiagflD that aren't tied m with tbe aanal 
retnni and c ei cb rrt i on of aliwl nad 
students. . . 

happenmg9 

Sindfe TiMter's fnimtUam al Dnvid 
Babe's NY Critic's amid^wimiing play 
"Streamers" plays tonight and Saturday 
Bight on Hbt Conradi Stage. The show 
starts at S:15, with free admission to 
students witfi I.D., and n Sl^ dmsgjt for 



musacal ofctm 'The Slwkiit Mnce" 
tonigfat tlifoagh SondiQr in MjAj Diamond 
Anditorinm. Tomglit and Satoiday's shows 
wiO slmt^ S:15 p.m. with the Sonday 
; starring at 2:30 p.m. Geneial 
is $3^, stndMits and senior 
citiaens get in §ot $1.75. 



t omo rro w and to honor him the Leon 
Coonty Ptobllc libnoy will show an 

of 

heginnii« at taniglit. Ticiets ate free 

bat mnst he picked m advance at the 

fibtaiy; 
to 



featnied at the openfaig of an exhibition at 
the Fine Arts Baildittg Sunday fihmi 7-9 
p-m. Wote by natkmally-kiwwn photo- 
grapheis Tons Barrow, Jo Ann Ci&. Paul 
diamond, Betty VUStm and Bil Owens will 
be indnded in the Sj^ectkm. A short 
reading by local poets Eugenie NaMe. Hal 
Shows and James Nobel wiH start at 8:30. 
The exhM is free and cMrtnnes thnmgh 
Deoendier 8. GnleiyhoBfs ate 10 a.m. — 1 
p.m. weekdays, and 1 — 4 p-m. Saturday 
and Sunday. 



^ t'sGaiy 

Quartet concert ate available at the LPO' 
office in Boom 238 Union. Tickets are free 

for FSU students aai S3 for BOMtadents. 

TfcfcaU for Pocnmh of'a Madrigal 
Dmneis can he pkhed IV for S8J0 dnt the 

Vf^^^^^ nmn^^^^L ^Vugj^S^^^ 

UnianiMet Office. 



local nightspots 



^is weekend, as 
gear-up for the 
of the faoth^^l 



Hafl wii 

brig 0*ic back to the stage for another 

fnnk-fifcd Friday and Satnday ai^t. 
Afe^nwhBe, TaBlrtnttaee s on^f d^wouaan 
band, the BoHng Mothers, amke a rare, 
on-stage q^ieaianoe tfiefc Sunday mght. 
And with the rfrfi T^ g shape of Tally s 
it iiMnii IBe a good bet. 



midnight-to-dawn, check out the 
Might Owl Roost and Bottle Cub tonight 
where Cross-Cnt Saw will be playing. 
Phqfing songs by Muddy Waters. Robert 
Johnson, Elmoie James, Junior Walker 
and other bhws greats, they might make 
you think Tennessee St. is really the 
southside of Chicago. Jazz- rock will be the 
order Saturday night when the laid-back 
Labamba works the Pastime night shift 

Those who picier straight jan can ffaid 
what they need at both the Sub and Pub 
downtown, where the Lohman-Mello band 
continue their stint, and at Ricco's Lounge 
in the Southemaire Motel, where Lindsey 
Sargeant, Jim Crazier and the Sound AfTah- 
wSI perform. Both groups play kmigbt and 
Saturday night. 



Style atmosphere. The Alley 
downtown will fit the bill with the piano 
and guitar of Tallahassee's Grayson and 
Johnson. The duo perfaims tonight and 
tomorro w night. 



wffl be finishing up their week-long stint at 
the Capitol hm tonght at 9 with sook 
TaBahassee-stvIe acoustic sounds. 

• linebacker, Mike Reed, 
played with the Philadelphia 
Ea^es, win be pounding the keys, not 
quarterbacks, tom^ and Samrday at 



n 



lor Las Vegas can catch 

at the Sea Fo%, East 
Te'mi^see St., tonight and Saturday. 
Carolyn Davis and Kick, a seven-piece 
band, will be providing th eentertainment, 
while erstwhile boogie children can find 
plenty of putrid, pulsating disco action all 
weekend at Cantina's, Big Daddy's. 
Smitty's, Byron's and the 21st Century 



staying up 



and hel^ rowdy from 



flicks 

Auditorium: Friday and Sataur- 
day night, SI. 50. 'Groove Tube, " 7:30 and 
10:30; '*Kentuckv Fried Movie," 9 and 12. 
Florida: 99 cents. "Hooper," 7:50, 9:45. 
NorthwoodMaM: ' Bora Again, " 1:J0, 3. 

5, 7. and 9 p.m. 
TaMahanarr MaO Cinema 1: "Who Is 

Killing the Great Chefs of Europe?" 7:20, 
9:40. Cfaema U: "Up in Smoke." 8. 9:50. 

Vmahy Mple: "Halloween," "Mid- 
night Ezpfess," 7:45, 10; "Inside Jenniier 
Wells." 8. 9:35. 

ntede Triilia; "Ahnost Summer. ' 
•Tdmes A Huiirmin," 7:45, 10; Buffak) 
/• 7, 9. 

ifiT- "The Day IT Came to 
" 7:15, 9:15; "Grease." 7:20. 9:30; 
Annnal House." 7. 9:30; 'TTie Boys from 
Ute Show: "Bocky Honor Picture 
," 11:30. 

Drive-in: "Deaihsport" and 
Eat My Ehist." surting at 7:30. midnight 
^ko^ : A Mkmstroos Nightmare of Fear." 
Al films, unless 
irS3. 





iHi^kt at Cli$j1>i^ 

4 i>if£tiU>U^. 



/ 



of:.. 



Cafe^& Disci 

666 W. TENN. ST. 

No Cover Charge 

ire6 /Ubniisioii SuMkiy 
Monday and Tuesday 

LAMB REE WEDNESDAY 



Cawer Chonie Ra4uced to on W oo k ondt 



20 / Friday, Novemb*>r 17 1978 AT WEEK'S END 



II 



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|: fliS ,1'-' 



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Review 



'Express ' overdramatize 
an already grisly story 



by csdric Harold 



Miiaght EipfMS, Vanity Thuiii, $2^ 
I saw MdMglrtEzpms the otlier nigtit. 
Luckily, I've m^oiired since then. I've also 
Ittd mote tIflM to ratioBaMise the fflm's 
many faults. The film is bad, a critical 
liiliife. On this eiact point the audience 
co B c ut fo d several times tinoughoot our 
showlQg, with various shoots, groans, and 
cries of "enou^, alreadyl*' ringing the 
theam. 

Witti iSbki one, tiie {womoters hope to 
reach a "cult audience" who, they 
fimtasize, will spring forth and lift the film 
from felative obscurity. They lust for 
another Cadwo's Nest: the type of film 
which gains popular acceptance more 
through receptive audiences than 
perceptive viewers. 

After all, CiidEoo's Neat had Jack 
Nicholson as an irresistable character in a 
magnificent situation. The same could 've 
been true for the character of Billy Hayes 
in Midnight Express; a young Hodman or 
Pacino playing it would have found instant 
success. See how much you hear about 
Brad Davis in the future. 

The film is about a young American, 
Billy Hayes, who becomes a prisoner in a 
Turkish prison for trying to smuggle two 
kilos of hash out of the country. The year is 
1970. The realities of the prison, of Turkish 
life, are supposedly depicted because (we 
are told) this is a true story. Eventually, 
Billy makes his way out of the prison, the 
midnight express, so that Hollywood could 
put this film together. 

Unfortunately, the mediocre acting 
(billed low-key) of Davis is superceded by 
very flat and typed supporting characters. 
As a result, or in addition, the film relies on 
contrived and heavy-handed dialogues to 
espouse its ideas. Actions usually speak 
louder than words. Here actions are 
delivered in tones ranging from shouts to 
whispers, and both are just as unsettling. 

A couple of episodes from the film 
readily attest to this misaligned treatment. 
A deep relationship between Billy and 



another imprisoned man culmiwites in 
sexual expression — idl of tills is rushed 
over in only a few minutes. Another 
sequence leads to BiQy brutally taking a 
bite out of a man's face, with two-shots 
reveainig the mie's pulpy, red mess and 
the other savagely chewing his prize for the 
doseup. 

Other scenes of hrutol vic^ence and gory 
consequences linger on the screen too long 
and too revealingly for most persons. Some 

of the graphics go beyond significance, 
even shock, to disgust and revulsion. Yet, 
tiie subject is the leahsm of a Turkish 
prison; so the treatment oi the depiction of 
dangling feet pounded viciously with a 
thick board by an immensely unpopular 
^ villain (straight out of the old days of violin 
music, home mortgages and mustache 
twitching) is presumably true. 

The viewer is, of course, being educated 
to the cruelties of this type of prison life. 
Much like the way he was informed about 
shark attacks by the subtleties of Jaws, and 
not too unlike the way he was treated to 
evil spirits in Exorcist and fascist 
policemen in Magnum Force. All, we 
remember well, box-office hits. 

The film does succeed in conveying a 
feeling, however negative, for the Turkish 
culture. The Turks speak their own 
language without the benefit of sub-titles 
to the viewer. Along with Billy Hayes, the 
confusion and alienation of a foreign 
country, and of his situation within it, 
Turkish culture comes undeniably through. 

Furthermore the photography is striking 
throughout. It is beautiful as well as 
meaningful. Also, the mood of the times is 
developed and stays consistent, ranging 
from the death of Joplin, to exploits by 
skyjackers and fuckups by Nixon. 

Final advice is. Let the Viewer Beware! 
My impression is that we're being sold by 
some economy-minded producers (too 
mindful of their own economies) and by 
idea-starved critics. If stars are being 
handed out, it gets a silver one for at least 
revealing a worthy issue and not going the 
way of Hollywood puff. 



PASTIME 

NIGHT OWL ROOST PRESENTS 

FRIDAY NITE 

CROSSCUT SAW 



OPEN 12:00 



BYOB 



TIL 5:00 A.M. 



DEAL: 



mister 

Buy a donut & o cup of coffee, ond get another 
donut FREE! 



Buy a doxen donuts, and get 6 FREEI 



Buy 10 dozen or Mere, and iove 30* per 

dozealll.» And students, don't forget we're 
open 24 hrs., so come on in & study wtth us. 
We've got plenty of booths, and lots of coffeeUl 

wM Student I.D. 2512 Balsam Terr. 

(Mfht Mif ti liw* IhiM) 





NEVER ON A SUNDAE... 

has there been a better offer! 

This Sunday buy one sundae 

of your choica & the next 

one at % off during 
lkȴvntown Opm Hoiim 

with this Good Sun. 






Fin 

cha 
ado 



by ui 

EUn, Flreisdl 
Firefall pr 
One woult 
blood and b< 
along the lint 
won't change 
ier away froml 
TbtttElaii. 4 
dream world 
worthy of woi 
Tbeniusic. 
Way^andJou 
is Mtcworth) 
reliesned con 

The lytics 
maa-gruBts si 
vorlia] bright 
ftiiiky rocker 
to hte old ncij 

Fast trill aJ 
Nelwarkof 
GaMBf doi 

lt*f oot mucH 
ioaad OQ thei 
Money talll 



only todanip^ 
apaHttle kn< 
that boyfrienj 

Yon hear ij 
Bangladesh, 
hnmans, wh( 
whites or wirj 

None are 

S|MSak out arl 

With fncts ]| 
Smfley n 

for an aasv. 

In compai 
iHiote IQ a 
Marmansk 
life on the si 



AMli 
Cold, 




Besides bei 
lyrics, Iflte 
meaaing. 

or Smih 
lyrical nadi 
yon're in 
on si^. 



L, jiLi iji, ..„,;.; ,L....j» 



AT WEEK'S END Fridav November 17 1978 f 21 





Smiley 
reviews 





'Oh groan, a haUad, JoM love 
ao MMcAorin iW» piilnfi'— 
</i«y ain't ao^rm' aothin' 
—from or Smiley'g notea 



FirefaU 



FirefaWs lyrics 
characterize their 
adolescent banality 



by or smiley wolfgang ferberg iii 

EUm, FirefaU, Atlantic Records 

Firefall probably eats fried chidLen with a fork. 

One would imagine its members are made of flesh and 
blood and bones just like you and me. But somewhere 
along the line the glittering rock star life (* *Life on the road 
won't dhange/But life at home is not the same") took them 
far away fiom the piss-ridden threslphold of reality. 

ThnsEtai, their tlnrd album, wallows in a simple, milky 
dream world where a bvoken heact is tlie only lemple 
worthy of worship. 

Themasic, particularly David Muse's (lute on "Strange 
Way" and Jock Bartley's guitar work on * 'Get You Back," 
is noteworthy, hut cmly because it stands out from the 
rehearsed coaniensial-FM lemakider . 

The lyrics, however, are so banal they make cave 
man-grunts sound like Ovid's flowery verse. Ebui's only 
verbal bri^ spot Gomes on * 'Wrong Side of Town," a 
fiinky rocker about a just-released convict who goes bade 
to his old oeig^dKifiiood to find: 

Iziy dia PMh hi iht i tritiHgN 
Fast tan and OMfce a sale 
Netwark of boys fai Ae nightUis 
Getting down SB avasy detail 

It's not much on poetics, but compared to the dismal lot 
found on their tove songs this is vibrant imagery. 

Money talks; and Firefall listens. Eight of Elan's ten 
cuts are saccharine ditties about broken hearts that serve 
only to dampen pre-teen panties. But anyone who's grown 
up